Analects In Nancy Chen's 'Embodying Qi'

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In Analects 17:25. Confucius said, "Women and servants are the most difficult to deal with. If you become familiar with them, they cease to be humble. If you keep a distance from them, they resent it" (Chan 17). In other words, Confucius claims that like servants, women cannot be given too much or too little attention. This quote surprised me considering that the Analects had portrayed Confucius as someone who unconditionally saw the good in humanity, and held respect and caring for others as the highest moral duty. While part of me understood the strong patriarchal context in which Confucius lived in, I never expected his attitude towards women to be so harsh. Although his quote misrepresents the Analects, because in many other ways Confucius …show more content…

They say its powers are an essential part of healthy living and can give any person, man or woman, supernatural powers (Chen 315). Since the 1980’s the health practice of qi has brought experts like Nancy Chen to uncover some of China’s social attitudes of men and women through the practice of qigong. In Nancy Chen’ article, “Embodying Qi,” Chen states that there is an even number of male and female qi participants, but fewer women are in high-level qi master positions. Although qi is not directly related to males, according to Chen, early text suggest that qi is “increasingly aligned with male bodies” (320), In a small way Chen observed that men are more likely to advance in rankings even in something as ordinary as quidong. While this small example of patriarchal influence, for me, it did not compare to the way Confucius described women, and it is uncomparable to the sexism that the women of a city called Shouting Hill endure every …show more content…

Before I had started my research I had expected most of the discrimination to come from rural areas, however, it is an issue that affects women across China. In addition, although gender inequality continues to be an issue, it seems that views on women have significantly improved from Confucius’s time and I believe it is also important to look at the advancements that have taken place. Finally, although Confucius’s attitude cannot be compared to modern standards, his words continue to represent the inequality that affects numerous parts of a Chinese woman’s life, from the negative views on a woman's qi, or the cruel prejudice in Shouting Hill or the state's indifference towards women's security, Confucius’s words continue to echo into modern

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