The Search for the Beautiful Woman
A Cultural History of Japanese and Chinese Beauty- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2012
Summary
While a slender body is a prerequisite for beauty today, plump women were considered ideal in Tang Dynasty China and Heian-period Japan. Starting around the Southern Song period in China, bound feet symbolized the attractiveness of women. But in Japan, shaved eyebrows and blackened teeth long were markers of loveliness.
For centuries, Japanese culture was profoundly shaped by China, but in complex ways that are only now becoming apparent. In this first full comparative history of the subject, Cho Kyo explores changing standards of feminine beauty in China and Japan over the past two millennia. Drawing on a rich array of literary and artistic sources gathered over a decade of research, he considers which Chinese representations were rejected or accepted and transformed in Japan. He then traces the introduction of Western aesthetics into Japan starting in the Meiji era, leading to slowly developing but radical changes in representations of beauty. Through fiction, poetry, art, advertisements, and photographs, the author vividly demonstrates how criteria of beauty differ greatly by era and culture and how aesthetic sense changed in the course of extended cultural transformations that were influenced by both China and the West.
Keywords
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2012
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4422-1893-2
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4422-1895-6
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 288
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Translator’s Note No access
- Preface to the English Edition No access
- Prologue No access Pages 1 - 14
- 1 : Favored Appearances No access Pages 15 - 40
- 2 : Feared Beauties No access Pages 41 - 70
- 3 : The Rhetoric of Representation No access Pages 71 - 106
- 4 : Beauty as a Construct No access Pages 107 - 130
- 5 : Beauties in Chinese Verse and Prose, Beauties in Japanese Literature No access Pages 131 - 158
- 6 : Resonance of Aesthetic Views No access Pages 159 - 184
- 7 : Edo Culture as a Filter No access Pages 185 - 214
- 8 : Until Naomi Was Born No access Pages 215 - 246
- Epilogue No access Pages 247 - 254
- Afterword No access Pages 255 - 256
- Glossary of Selected Chinese and Japanese Names, Titles, and Terms No access Pages 257 - 276
- Selected Bibliography No access Pages 277 - 280
- Index No access Pages 281 - 288





