Wednesday, August 6, 2014

HE-YIN ZHEN AND THE RISE OF CHINESE FEMINISM IN THE 20TH CENTURY

China’s sense of self-sufficiency was challenged in the mid-nineteenth century when the two Opium Wars forced the opening of trade with Britain, France, Prussia, and the United States. While China had been open to international trade for centuries, the new global situation was dominated by Europe and America. Missionaries arrived with the economic changes, bringing with them new ideas and new sociocultural values. China had to find a way to adapt or submit to the new situation. The way the Chinese intellectuals dealt with the issues of injustice, particularly the “woman problem,” is indicative of the struggle to form a new identity in the face of the changing global situation.[1]
            It was China’s educated class who tried to find strategic ways to manage the changes. They started new industries, translated foreign works, and started schools that embraced new forms of knowledge from abroad. They traveled the world trying to learn how they could use the methods and ideas of the now dominant cultures to bring China to a prominent position among the globe’s most powerful nations. These efforts also gave them more ammunition to critique their own society.[2]
            By 1895, many of the educated, both men and women, had centered their efforts on reforming the political, social, cultural, commercial, and military organizations in China. The Hundred Days’ Reform in 1898, during which the young emperor, Guangxu, agreed to sweeping reforms, was, in many ways, the culmination of their efforts.[3] However, the dowager empress, Cixi, who was the aunt of the twenty-two year old emperor, fearing the group who supported the reforms, made China even more open to the control of the West, returned to the Forbidden City and issued a statement that the emperor had asked her to assume power. She immediately set about eliminating the group of intellectuals who had influenced her nephew; she put several to death, but others were able to flee. Liang Qichao was one of those who were able to escape.[4]
            One of the reformers was Liang Qichao who is considered the “foremost modern intellectuals of China” of the early twentieth century. After the coup by the Empress Dowager Cixi, Liang fled to Japan where he systematically spread his influence with the publication of several journals. His essay “On Women’s Education,” first published in 1897, was a major contribution to the growing sense of the need to empower women.[5] Liang’s work is an example of the prevailing perspective on the empowerment of women in meeting China’s nationalist needs.[6]
            In “On Women’s Education,” Liang asserts that women are capable of being educated and that their education was a necessary component of the pursuit of a national enlightenment. He advocated the opening of women’s schools, arguing that education is the only road that will lead to women citizens who are knowledgeable, independent, and who will hold the new values of intelligence, ethics, and force.[7]
            Jin Tianhe is another intellectual who contributed to the growth of Chinese feminist thought in the early twentieth century. He was a writer, educator, and political figure who helped to fund “The Revolutionary Army,” a short written work that called for the overthrow of the Qing court. Jin published “The Women’s Bell” in 1903, which is commonly called a “feminist manifesto.” This work demonstrates a perspective that was common among intellectuals of the time: a desire to emulate the values, manners, and methods of the European upper class white male.[8] These intellectuals were challenged by the hyper-masculinity of the military might of the Western man, but they were also being confronted by accusations of the Chinese enslavement of women, which was used as justification for the colonization of the “barbarous” and “half-civilized” Eastern societies. They met these challenges by completely rethinking their social and governmental conventions. However, their perspective on the empowerment of women was related only to the strength of the nation and, by extension, their own power, rather than the innate value of women as human beings.[9]
            This is where He-Yin Zhen, another advocate of Chinese feminism, differs most significantly from other Chinese feminist thinkers. He-Yin Zhen viewed the feminist struggle as both the beginning, and the result of, a complete social revolution “that would abolish the state and private property to bring about true social equality and the end to all social hierarchies.[10]
            He-Yin Zhen was born in 1884. She married Liu Shipei, a renowned classical Confucian scholar, in 1904. In 1907, they moved to Tokyo and became acquainted with the Chinese revolutionaries in exile there. It was in Japan that He-Yin was exposed to the anarchist thinking of the early twentieth century. Also in 1907, along with several exiles, He-Yin started the Society for the Restoration of Women’s Rights and began “Natural Justice,” the society’s journal.[11]
            The journal only lasted a year, but, in that time, it became the primary means whereby the ideas of feminism, socialism, Marxism, and anarchism were articulated in final part of the Qing dynasty. Both He-Yin and Liu Shipei wrote for the journal. Each used pseudonyms, which has led to the misattribution of some of He-Yin’s articles to Liu Shipei.[12] In 1908, the couple had a falling out with the other revolutionaries, who claimed that they were in league with the Qing regime, which led to their ostracism after the 1911 fall of the Qing dynasty.[13] 
            Liu Shipei died in 1919, and He-Yin was lost to history. Only rumors remain about the end of her life. One of these rumors claims that she became a Buddhist nun, and another claims that she had a mental disorder that led to her death soon after her husband. He-Yin’s ideas, however, remain as a radical rethinking of foundational ideas such as man and woman (nannu), and livelihood (shengji).[14]
            Nannu is comprised of the words for man (nan) and woman (nu). This literal translation of nannu as male/female or man/woman does not adequately express the way in which He-Yin used the term. In He-Yin’s article, “On the Question of Women’s Liberation,” she claims that male created morality and politics were designed to separate man from woman. She claims that this separation was one of the first misguided dualistic ideas of male dominated cosmologies.[15]
            She uses the term as a primary category in itself, as a class designation, and one that is subtler than the Western concepts of sex, gender, sexuality, or even gender differences. She insists that feminist thinkers need to see beyond what she sees are artificially created categories, which establish the chains of oppression, where woman is the problem of man, and which demand a complex social hierarchy to meet the needs of the dual categories.[16]
            In her essay, “On the Question of Women’s Liberation,” He-Yin suggests that the person is imprisoned by the social and political structure in which the designation between man and woman and their appropriate place in society is a foundational structure on which hierarchies of power are constructed, long before the person is given a gender designation. To put it another way, the very existence of the simple dualistic designation at the core of the Confucian system of political and social life is a prison for the individual prior to actively being divided into the categories of the system.[17]
            In her use of the term nannu, He-Yin attempted to demonstrate the weaknesses inherent in any social or political system. She uses the concept of shengji (livelihood) to criticize “capitalism, modernity, coloniality, the state, and imperial traditions.[18]” To He-Yin, private property was the primary issue in political and social structures. She saw the beginning of the institution of slavery as the view of woman as private property.[19] From this perspective, He-Yin saw the primary inquiry for feminist thinkers was the accumulation of power through wealth as private property supported by a political structure. All political structures were suspect. He-Yin believed that the government existed only to secure power and wealth for the already powerful and wealthy. This was why she was so drawn to anarchism. To He-Yin anarchism and feminism were pieces of a whole.[20]
This view was in direct conflict with most of the Chinese intellectuals and revolutionaries of the early twentieth century. Both Liang Qichao and Jin Tianhe worked for a form of freedom that had a state political structure at its core. They did not believe that freedom could be guaranteed unless it was enforced by the state. He-Yin was suspicious of any idea in which the freedom of women was solely guaranteed by the state.[21]
            The issue of shengji, then, was the freedom of the woman to invest herself into the universal struggle to survive and thrive through the reality of labor unencumbered by the artificial dictates of any given social or political structure. Thus, she viewed the new industrialized setting that her contemporaries favored as a different form of the same enslavement to “industrial waged work.[22]
            At the beginning of the twentieth century, He-Yin Zhen lifted her voice in opposition to what she believed was the causes of injustice in the world. Her thought was original and complex, if extreme, and often quite different than such male contemporaries as Jin Tianhe and Liang Qichao, who believed freedom for all could be secured through the establishment of a new socio-political order.




[1] Lydia H. Liu, Rebecca E. Karl, and Dorothy Ko, The Birth of Chinese Feminism: Essential Texts in Transnational Theory (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013), 28.
[2] Ibid, 29.
[3] Jonathan D. Spence, The Search for Modern China (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2013), 218.
[4] Ibid, 221.
[5] Liu, Karl, and Ko, Chinese Feminism, 187.
[6] Tani E. Barlow, The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), 50.
[7] Liang Qichao, “On Women’s Education,” in The Birth of Chinese Feminism, ed. Lydia H. Liu, Rebecca E. Karl, and Dorothy Ko (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013), 189 – 203.
[8] Liu, Karl, and Ko, Chinese Feminism, 1.
[9] Ibid, 6.
[10]Ibid, 7.
[11] Ibid, 51.
[12] Ibid
[13] Ibid
[14] Ibid
[15] Ibid, 13.
[16] Ibid, 20.
[17] Ibid, 21.
[18] Ibid, 22.
[19] He-Yin Zhen, “Economic Revolution and Women’s Revolution, “ in The Birth of Chinese Feminism: Essential Texts in Transnational Theory, ed. Lydia H. Liu, Rebecca E. Karl, and Dorothy Ko, 92. New York: Columbia University Press, 2013.
[20] Ibid, 23.
[21] Ibid
[22] Ibid, 25.