TY - BOOK AU - Dewoskin,Kenneth J. AU - Furth,Charlotte AU - Hung,Wu AU - Kenney,Anne B. AU - Kinney,Anne Behnke AU - Leung,Angela Ki Che AU - Lupher,Mark AU - Mather,Richard B. AU - Miller,Lucien AU - Pease,Catherine E. AU - Sommerville,C.John AU - Waltner,Ann AU - Wu,Pei-Yi TI - Chinese Views of Childhood SN - 9780824861889 U1 - 305.23/0951 PY - 1995///] CY - Honolulu : PB - University of Hawaii Press, KW - Children KW - China KW - History KW - Social conditions KW - Youth KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgments --; Chinese Dynasties --; Foreword --; Introduction --; Part One Early China --; 1. Dyed Silk: Han Notions Of The Moral Development Of Children --; 2. Famous Chinese Childhoods --; 3. Private Love and Public Duty: Images of Children in Early Chinese Art --; 4. Filial Paragons and Spoiled Brats: A Glimpse of Medieval Chinese Children in the Shishuo Xinyu --; Part Two Mid- to Late Imperial China --; 5. Childhood Remembered: Parents and Children in China, 800 to 1700 --; 6. From Birth to Birth: The Growing Body in Chinese Medicine --; 7. Infanticide and Dowry in Ming and Early Qing China --; 8.Children of the Dream: The Adolescent World in Cao Xueqin’s Honglou Meng --; Part Three Early Modern and Modern China --; 9. Relief Institutions for Children in Nineteenth- Century China --; 10. Remembering the Taste of Melons: Modern Chinese Stories of Childhood --; 11. Revolutionary Little Red Devils: The Social Psychology of Rebel Youth, 1966–1967 --; Contributors --; Index; restricted access N2 - Chinese in the twentieth century, intent on modernizing their country, condemned their inherited culture in part on the grounds that it was oppressive to the young. The authors of this pioneering volume provide us with the evidence to re-examine those charges. Drawing on sources ranging from art to medical treatises, fiction, and funerary writings, they separate out the many complexities in the Chinese cultural construction of childhood and the ways it has changed over time. Listening to how Chinese talked about children--whether their own child, the abstract child in need of education or medical care, the ideal precocious child, or the fictional child--lets us assess in concrete terms the structures and values that underlay Chinese life UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9780824861889 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780824861889 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780824861889/original ER -