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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(14 pp.) A Chinese history scholar has
written: "Most sympathetic observers of Chinese
women have … concluded that a major obstacle on
the road to furthering gender equality in China
remains the task of overcoming women's long
ingrained 'sense of inferiority ' in their new
roles and their acceptance of subordination in
light of a thousand years of cultural
conditioning." This issue will be discussed in
relationship to Chen Yuan-tsung's autobiography,
The Dragon's Village (1980) Bibliography lists
1 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBchnwm.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
light of a thousand years of cultural conditioning." This issue will be discussed in relationship to Chen Yuan-tsungs autobiography, The Dragons Village (1980) Bibliography lists 1 sources. BBchnwm.doc
"The Dragons Village" Chen Yuan-tsung Written by B. Bryan Babcock for the Paperstore, Inc., March 2001 Introduction A Chinese history scholar has written: "Most
sympathetic observers of Chinese women have ... concluded that a major obstacle on the road to furthering gender equality in China remains the task of overcoming womens long ingrained sense
of inferiority in their new roles and their acceptance of subordination in light of a thousand years of cultural conditioning." This issue will be discussed in relationship to
Chen Yuan-tsungs autobiography, The Dragons Village (1980). The History When we read that it has taken a thousand years to firmly ingrain any given pattern, it does seem relevant to
look at some of the history of the country that leads to this authors story. The heroine of "The Dragons Village" is Guan Ling-ling, a young woman born in
the early thirties to a relatively prosperous family living in Shanghai. While she is toddling around her parents house, things are in chaos in northern China. By 1931 Mao Zedong,
promising land reform has achieved a broad political peasant base. The Red Army is being recruited from Jiangxi. Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang (the anti-communinists) begin to push
the Red Army north to Shaanxi province, where they establish military headquarters and manufacturing sites. Yet by 1937 the Sino-Japanese are once more pounding to get in; the only
way to over takeover is for the two warring Chinese to call a truce and expel the invaders. By 1939 the Japanese are gone, but the truce has broken
...