Transgressive Typologies

Constructions of Gender and Power in Early Tang China

Rebecca Doran author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Harvard University, Asia Center

Published:13th Feb '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Transgressive Typologies cover

The exceptionally powerful Chinese women leaders of the late seventh and early eighth centuries—including Wu Zhao, the Taiping and Anle princesses, Empress Wei, and Shangguan Wan’er—though quite prominent in the Chinese cultural tradition, remain elusive and often misunderstood or essentialized throughout history. Transgressive Typologies utilizes a new, multidisciplinary approach to understand how these figures’ historical identities are constructed in the mainstream secular literary-historical tradition and to analyze the points of view that inform these constructions.

Using close readings and rereadings of primary texts written in medieval China through later imperial times, this study elucidates narrative typologies and motifs associated with these women to explore how their power is rhetorically framed, gendered, and ultimately deemed transgressive. Rebecca Doran offers a new understanding of major female figures of the Tang era within their literary-historical contexts, and delves into critical questions about the relationship between Chinese historiography, reception-history, and the process of image-making and cultural construction.

  • Nominated for John K. Fairbank Prize in East Asian History 2017
  • Nominated for Joseph Levenson Book Prize 2018

ISBN: 9780674970588

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

270 pages