Women in Erpai: The gap between rhetoric and representation
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jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pThe late Ming short story collections jats:italicPai’an jingqi</jats:italic> and jats:italicErke pai’an jingqi</jats:italic> (together known as jats:italicErpai</jats:italic>), authored by Ling Mengchu (1580-1644), have been credited by a variety of scholars with expressing a relatively “progressive” attitude toward women. This assessment arises from a strong influence in the texts from the philosophies of the heterodox thinker Li Zhi (1527-1602), who argued the notion that women were not inherently less able than men. Scattered throughout the collections are discursive asides addressed at the audience, a number of which not only support this view, but also develop it to assert the legitimacy of female sexual desire, and argue that widowed women should not be derided for remarrying. However, the strong stance taken in these discursive asides is not always reflected in the representations of women in the narratives themselves. Instead, strong female characters are desexed, while many of the other female characters are represented either as paragons of conventional virtue or as alien threats to the male subject. The gulf between the two discourses so created in jats:italicErpai</jats:italic> highlights the limited influence of rhetoric on representation, and thus on the ideological construction of “woman.”</jats:p>
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1568-5268