Description
Exploring these histories and many more, this book is a groundbreaking study of transgender lives and practices in late imperial China. Through close readings of court cases, as well as Ming and Qing fiction and nineteenth-century newspaper accounts, Matthew H. Sommer examines the social, legal, and cultural histories of gender crossing. He considers a range of transgender experiences, illuminating how certain forms of gender transgression were sanctioned in particular social contexts and penalized in others. Sommer scrutinizes the ways Qing legal authorities and literati writers represented and understood gender-nonconforming people and practices, contrasting official ideology with popular mentalities. An unprecedented account of China's transgender histories, this book also sheds new light on a range of themes in Ming and Qing law, religion, medicine, literature, and culture.
About the Author
Matthew H. Sommer is the Bowman Family Professor of History at Stanford University. He is the author of Sex, Law, and Society in Late Imperial China (2000) and Polyandry and Wife-Selling in Qing Dynasty China: Survival Strategies and Judicial Interventions (2015).
Reviews
Matthew Sommer makes splendid use of contemporary transgender theory to shed light upon, and gain new insight into, late imperial Chinese society. Far from anachronistically imposing a presentist category on the radical difference of the past, Sommer examines a variety of individual cases in which manifold practices of gender-crossing allow previously underappreciated aspects of law, religion, literature, and social order to click into focus with startling clarity. -- Susan Stryker, author of Transgender History: The Roots of Today's Revolution
In equal measure theoretically informed and richly documented, Matthew Sommer's newest book centers around six cases of male-to-female cross-dressers or intersex commoners in Qing China who eventually get caught up in legal altercations. Sommer's definition of transgender is broad-essentially anyone living outside Confucian familial norms-comprising a continuum from monks who "left the family," to eunuchs, cross-dressing actors, intersex brides, and those who "passed" male for female (until they were outed), many of whom met a violent end. Charting the fear that those who engaged in trans practices must have harbored nefarious motives, all the while suggesting that such lifestyles were much more common and accepted in everyday life than we might imagine, this provocative historicization of transgendering in late imperial China is at once both universal and deeply particular. Its lucid prose should make this study accessible well beyond the China field. -- Andrea S. Goldman, author of Opera and the City: The Politics of Culture in Beijing, 1770-1900
Book Information
ISBN 9780231214131
Author Matthew H. Sommer
Format Paperback
Page Count 384
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press