Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

The Sung Dynasty (960-1279) was a paradoxical era for Chinese women. This was a time when footbinding spread, and Confucian scholars began to insist that it was better for a widow to starve than to remarry. Yet there were also improvements in women's status in marriage and property rights. In this thoroughly original work, one of the most respected scholars of premodern China brings to life what it was like to be a woman in Sung times, from having a marriage arranged, serving parents-in-law, rearing children, and coping with concubines, to deciding what to do if widowed.

Focusing on marriage, Patricia Buckley Ebrey views family life from the perspective of women. She argues that the ideas, attitudes, and practices that constituted marriage shaped women's lives, providing the context in which they could interpret the opportunities open to them, negotiate their relationships with others, and accommodate or resist those around them.

Ebrey questions whether women's situations actually deteriorated in the Sung, linking their experiences to widespread social, political, economic, and cultural changes of this period. She draws from advice books, biographies, government documents, and medical treatises to show that although the family continued to be patrilineal and patriarchal, women found ways to exert their power and authority. No other book explores the history of women in pre-twentieth-century China with such energy and depth.

About the Author

Patricia Buckley Ebrey is Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Illinois, Urbana, and the author of Confucianism and Family Rituals in Imperial China (1991).

Table of Contents

FOREWORD, BY BONNIE SMITH
PREFACE
NOTES ON CONVENTIONS
THE BORDERS OF SUNG CHINA (960-1279)
INTRODUCTION

I. Separating the Sexes
2. Meanings of Marriage
3. Making a Match
4. Rites and Celebrations
5. Dowries
6. Upper-Class Wives as Inner Helpers
7. Women's Work Making Cloth
8. Husband-Wife Relations
9. Motherhood
10. Widowhood
11. Second Marriages
12. Concubines
13. Continuing the Family Through Women
14. Adultery, Incest, and Divorce
15. Reflections on Women, Marriage, and Change

NOTES
SOURCES CITED
INDEX

Reviews

"Opening up questions about women's lives, about gender, about why we read history at all and how we write it, Patricia Buckley Ebrey has made The Inner Quarters a place we need to enter."—from the Foreword

Awards

  • Joseph Levenson Prize for books on Pre-Twentieth Century China published in 1993 1995, Association for Asian Studies