History
Reply 2
The status of women both in Ancient China and Japan differed greatly in many ways. Until the twentieth-century women in ancient china were not viewed as equivalents in their societies. Women weren’t equivalent to men since they were shameful and incapable of education. Their job in the society, their education, their capacity in the family unit was altogether different if they were male or female. An average female had considerably less power contrasted with a man they were viewed as inferior. It was unjustifiable and to a degree on how the women were dealt with contrasted with a man, yet during that time in China, it was typical to the point that nobody addressed it. In Ancient Japan it esteemed men over ladies, ladies assumed a significant role in society. They were the spine that secured and thought about their family. All through these occasions, Japanese ladies were moms, performers, and even warriors. The measure of opportunity a lady got depended extraordinarily on her social class. The status of women started to change in the twentieth-century when things began to smooth for women in china. This is the point at which a women’s development started to spread and requested an end to foot binding. In Ancient Japan impacts from Confucianism and Buddhism likewise radically changed the place of women on how they were viewed inside Japanese society. For instance, it is Confucianism that focused on that the men ought to be put over ladies. They should respect their family members as a daughter, wife, and mother. In Ancient China the most important factor in women’s equality was communism. Communists accepted that women were equal to men and the government began to pass laws in favor of women. Chinese women enjoyed equal rights with men both politically and economically and protected their rights and interests. It was hard for Japanese women to get economic independence hence they had to marry to guarantee financial and social freedom.
The status of women both in Ancient China and Japan differed greatly in many ways. Until the twentieth-century women in ancient china were not viewed as equivalents in their societies. Women weren’t equivalent to men since they were shameful and incapable of education. Their job in the society, their education, their capacity in the family unit was altogether different if they were male or female. An average female had considerably less power contrasted with a man they were viewed as inferior. It was unjustifiable and to a degree on how the women were dealt with contrasted with a man, yet during that time in China, it was typical to the point that nobody addressed it. In Ancient Japan it esteemed men over ladies, ladies assumed a significant role in society. They were the spine that secured and thought about their family. All through these occasions, Japanese ladies were moms, performers, and even warriors. The measure of opportunity a lady got depended extraordinarily on her social class. The status of women started to change in the twentieth-century when things began to smooth for women in china. This is the point at which a women’s development started to spread and requested an end to foot binding. In Ancient Japan impacts from Confucianism and Buddhism likewise radically changed the place of women on how they were viewed inside Japanese society. For instance, it is Confucianism that focused on that the men ought to be put over ladies. They should respect their family members as a daughter, wife, and mother. In Ancient China the most important factor in women’s equality was communism. Communists accepted that women were equal to men and the government began to pass laws in favor of women. Chinese women enjoyed equal rights with men both politically and economically and protected their rights and interests. It was hard for Japanese women to get economic independence hence they had to marry to guarantee financial and social freedom.
23 Sep 2019 23:53
Reply1
In Ancient China and Japan, the main factors that affected the status of women were Confucianism and Buddhism. The former’s creed with respects to women is contained in the Book of Rites (Liji), a component of the Confucian classics. On women, it prescribed social proprieties like wearing a veil and stated that women can follow their Confucian Tao by staying at home and being subservient wives and mothers. It was considered a women’s moral duty to stay in the home (nei) and not subvert her duties by going outside the home into the domain of men (wai). Likewise, other Confucian works like Biographies of Exemplary Women (Lienu Zhuan) by Liu Xiang and Disciplines for Women (Nu Jie) by Ban Zhao were influential, especially the latter for it constituted the heart of a women’s behavioral education and is written by a woman. And, particularly in China, historians’ (likely of a Confucian tilt) tendency to demonize powerful women and their tendency to blame women in general for dynastic collapses (and possibly other disasters) likely diminished the status of women further. Finally, the contrived beauty standards in China only added to the notion that women were objects to be controlled and shaped to men’s wishes, with bound feet being a particularly egregious example. Now, there was a renaissance in women’s status seen during the Tang and Song dynasties that can be attributed to Empress Wu Zetian and her promotion of Buddhism and to the inflow of ideas from the Silk Road, but even this was ultimately undone by Neo-Confucianism and its new generation of male scholars. But, the lasting impact that these alternate systems of thought, especially Buddhism, had on China and Japan cannot be understated. In China, Empress Wu was a foreshadowing of the psychologically liberating power of Buddhism, for she ruled assertively and was emboldened to set standards that were irrespective of sex and even renamed herself to symbolize this. Likewise, in Japan, Buddhism’s gender agnosticism along with the women-friendly ideology of Shinto laid the groundwork for Japanese women, who were otherwise homebound like their Chinese counterparts. But the Japanese women found other meaningful ways to assert themselves; they developed their own aesthetic style distinct from Tang women and, as exemplified by Heian writers like Murasaki Shikibu, also expressed themselves through writing and literature. Although these expressions were suppressed by the arrival of the samurai of medieval Japan, their legacy in modern Japan lives on.
In Ancient China and Japan, the main factors that affected the status of women were Confucianism and Buddhism. The former’s creed with respects to women is contained in the Book of Rites (Liji), a component of the Confucian classics. On women, it prescribed social proprieties like wearing a veil and stated that women can follow their Confucian Tao by staying at home and being subservient wives and mothers. It was considered a women’s moral duty to stay in the home (nei) and not subvert her duties by going outside the home into the domain of men (wai). Likewise, other Confucian works like Biographies of Exemplary Women (Lienu Zhuan) by Liu Xiang and Disciplines for Women (Nu Jie) by Ban Zhao were influential, especially the latter for it constituted the heart of a women’s behavioral education and is written by a woman. And, particularly in China, historians’ (likely of a Confucian tilt) tendency to demonize powerful women and their tendency to blame women in general for dynastic collapses (and possibly other disasters) likely diminished the status of women further. Finally, the contrived beauty standards in China only added to the notion that women were objects to be controlled and shaped to men’s wishes, with bound feet being a particularly egregious example. Now, there was a renaissance in women’s status seen during the Tang and Song dynasties that can be attributed to Empress Wu Zetian and her promotion of Buddhism and to the inflow of ideas from the Silk Road, but even this was ultimately undone by Neo-Confucianism and its new generation of male scholars. But, the lasting impact that these alternate systems of thought, especially Buddhism, had on China and Japan cannot be understated. In China, Empress Wu was a foreshadowing of the psychologically liberating power of Buddhism, for she ruled assertively and was emboldened to set standards that were irrespective of sex and even renamed herself to symbolize this. Likewise, in Japan, Buddhism’s gender agnosticism along with the women-friendly ideology of Shinto laid the groundwork for Japanese women, who were otherwise homebound like their Chinese counterparts. But the Japanese women found other meaningful ways to assert themselves; they developed their own aesthetic style distinct from Tang women and, as exemplified by Heian writers like Murasaki Shikibu, also expressed themselves through writing and literature. Although these expressions were suppressed by the arrival of the samurai of medieval Japan, their legacy in modern Japan lives on.