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{{Short description|Former Chinese custom}}
{{Infobox Chinese
{{Infobox Chinese
|pic=A Chinese Golden Lily Foot, Lai Afong, c1870s.jpg
|pic=A Chinese Golden Lily Foot, Lai Afong, c1870s.jpg
|picalt=An albumen silver print photograph of a young woman with bound feet; she sits on a chair facing left, her feet - one with a lotus shoe, the other bare - propped up on a stool.
|piccap =A Chinese woman showing her foot, image by [[Lai Afong]], c. 1870s
|piccap =A Chinese woman showing her foot, image by [[Lai Afong]], {{circa|1870s}}
|picsize = 220px
|picsize = 220px
|t=纏足
|t=纏足
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|ci={{IPAc-yue|c|in|4|.|z|uk|1}}
|ci={{IPAc-yue|c|in|4|.|z|uk|1}}
|altname=Alternative (Min) Chinese name
|altname=Alternative (Min) Chinese name
|t2=縛跤
|t2= 裹腳
|s2=缚跤
|s2= 裹脚
|poj2=pa̍k-kha
|poj2=
}}
}}
'''Foot binding''' was the custom of applying tight binding to the feet of young girls to modify the shape and size of their feet. The practice possibly originated among upper class court dancers during the [[Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period]] in 10th century China, then gradually became popular among the elite during the [[Song dynasty]]. Foot binding eventually spread to most social classes by the [[Qing dynasty]] and the practice finally came to an end in the early 20th century. Bound feet were at one time considered a status symbol as well as a mark of beauty. Yet, foot binding was a painful practice and significantly limited the mobility of women, resulting in lifelong disabilities for most of its subjects. Feet altered by binding were called '''lotus feet'''.


'''Foot binding''' ({{Lang-zh|s=缠足|t=纏足|p=chánzú}}), or '''footbinding''', was the Chinese custom of breaking and tightly binding the feet of young girls to change their shape and size. Feet altered by foot binding were known as '''lotus feet''' and the shoes made for them were known as [[lotus shoe]]s. In late imperial China, bound feet were considered a [[status symbol]] and a mark of feminine beauty. However, foot binding was a painful practice that limited the mobility of women and resulted in lifelong disabilities.
Foot binding was practised in different forms, and the more severe form of binding may have been developed in the 16th century. It has been estimated that by the 19th century, 40–50% of all Chinese women may have had bound feet, and up to almost 100% among upper-class Chinese women.<ref name="lim" >{{cite web |last=Lim |first=Louisa |title=Painful Memories for China's Footbinding Survivors |url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=8966942 |work=Morning Edition |publisher=National Public Radio |date=19 March 2007}}</ref> The prevalence and practice of foot binding however varied in different parts of the country.


The prevalence and practice of foot binding varied over time and by region and social class.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018}} The practice may have originated among court dancers during the [[Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period]] in 10th-century China and gradually became popular among the elite during the [[Song dynasty]], later spreading to lower social classes by the [[Qing dynasty]] (1644–1912). [[Manchu]] emperors attempted to ban the practice in the 17th century but failed.<ref name="bbc"/> In some areas, foot binding raised marriage prospects. It has been estimated that by the 19th&nbsp;century 40–50% of all Chinese women may have had bound feet, rising to almost 100% among upper-class [[Han Chinese]] women.<ref>{{cite web |last=Lim |first=Louisa |title=Footbinding: From Status Symbol to Subjugation |url=https://www.vpm.org/npr-news/2007-03-19/footbinding-from-status-symbol-to-subjugation |work=NPR News |date=19 March 2007}}</ref>
There had been attempts to end the practice during the Qing dynasty; Manchu [[Kangxi Emperor]] tried to ban foot binding in 1664 but failed.<ref name="bbc" /> In the later part of the 19th century, Chinese reformers challenged the practice but it was not until the early 20th century that foot binding began to die out as a result of anti-foot-binding campaigns. Only a few elderly Chinese women still survive today with bound feet.<ref name="lim"/>

While [[Christian missionaries]] and Chinese reformers challenged the practice in the late 19th&nbsp;century, it was not until the early 20th&nbsp;century that the practice began to die out, following the efforts of anti-foot binding campaigns. Additionally, upper-class and urban women dropped the practice sooner than poorer rural women.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=68}} By 2007, only a handful of elderly Chinese women whose feet had been bound were still alive.<ref name="lim">{{cite web |last=Lim |first=Louisa |title=Painful Memories for China's Footbinding Survivors |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220607070627/https://www.npr.org/2007/03/19/8966942/painful-memories-for-chinas-footbinding-survivors |archive-date=7 June 2022 |url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=8966942 |work=Morning Edition |publisher=National Public Radio |date=19 March 2007}}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==

=== Origin ===
=== Origin ===
[[File:Yaoniang binding feet.jpg|thumb|200px|18th-century illustration showing Yao Niang binding her own feet]]
[[File:Yaoniang binding feet.jpg|thumb|200px|alt=A black and white stylised illustration of a seated woman, one foot resting on top of her left thigh, wrapping and binding her right foot.|18th-century illustration showing Yao Niang binding her own feet]]
There are a number of stories about the origin of foot binding before its establishment during the [[Song dynasty]]. One of these accounts is of [[Pan Yunu]], a favourite consort of the [[Southern Qi]] Emperor [[Xiao Baojuan]]. In the story, Pan Yunu, renowned for having delicate feet, performed a dance barefoot on a floor decorated with the design of a golden lotus. The Emperor, expressing admiration, said that "lotus springs from her every step!" ({{transliteration|zh|bù bù shēng lián}} {{lang|zh|歩歩生蓮}}), a reference to the [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] legend of Padmavati, under whose feet lotus springs forth. This story may have given rise to the terms 'golden lotus' or 'lotus feet' used to describe bound feet; there is no evidence, however, that Consort Pan ever bound her feet.{{sfn|Ko|2002|pp=32–34}}

There are a number of stories about the origin of foot binding before its establishment during the Song dynasty. One of these involves the story of a favorite consort of the [[Southern Qi]] emperor [[Xiao Baojuan]], [[Pan Yunu]] (died 501 AD), who had delicate feet and danced barefoot on a floor decorated with golden lotus flower design. The emperor expressed admiration and said that "lotus springs from her every step!" (步步生蓮), a reference to the Buddhist legend of Padmavati under whose feet lotus springs forth. This story may have given rise to the terms "golden lotus" or "lotus feet" used to describe bound feet; there is, however, no evidence that Consort Pan ever bound her feet.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/?id=qpNQ91M3BswC&pg=PA34#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Every Step a Lotus: Shoes for Bound Feet|author=Dorothy Ko |pages=32–34 |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2002 |isbn=978-0-520-23284-6 }}</ref>


The general view is that the practice is likely to have originated from the time of the 10th-century [[Li Yu (Southern Tang)|Emperor Li Yu]] of the [[Southern Tang]], just before the [[Song dynasty]].<ref name="bbc">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ptop/alabaster/A1155872 |title=Chinese Foot Binding |publisher=BBC }}</ref> Li Yu created a six-foot tall golden lotus decorated with precious stones and pearls, and asked his concubine {{Interlanguage link multi|Yao Niang|zh|3=窅娘}} to bind her feet in white silk into the shape of the crescent moon, and perform a ballet-like dance on the points of her feet on the lotus.<ref name="bbc" /> Yao Niang's dance was said to be so graceful that others sought to imitate her.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/?id=qpNQ91M3BswC&pg=PA42#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Every Step a Lotus: Shoes for Bound Feet|author=Dorothy Ko |pages=42 |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2002 |isbn=978-0-520-23284-6 }}</ref> The binding of feet was then replicated by other upper-class women and the practice spread.<ref name="pitts-taylor">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/?id=66u24WAyO_YC&pg=PA203#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cultural Encyclopedia of the Body |page=203 |editor=Victoria Pitts-Taylor |publisher=Greenwood |date= 2008 |isbn=978-0-313-34145-8 }}</ref>
The general view is that the practice is likely to have originated during the reign of the 10th-century Emperor [[Li Yu (Southern Tang)|Li Yu]] of the [[Southern Tang]], just before the Song dynasty.<ref name="bbc">{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ptop/alabaster/A1155872 |title=Chinese Foot Binding |publisher=BBC |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131118153249/https://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ptop/alabaster/A1155872 |archive-date=2013-11-18 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Li Yu created a {{convert|6|ft|m|1|order=flip|adj=mid|-tall|sp=us}} golden lotus decorated with precious stones and pearls and asked his concubine Yao Niang {{lang|zh|(窅娘)}} to bind her feet in white silk into the shape of the crescent moon. She then performed a dance on the points of her bound feet on the lotus.<ref name="bbc"/> Yao Niang's dance was said to be so graceful that others sought to imitate her.{{sfn|Ko|2002|pp=42}} The binding of feet was then replicated by other upper-class women and the practice spread.<ref name="pitts-taylor">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=66u24WAyO_YC&pg=PA203 |title=Cultural Encyclopedia of the Body |page=203 |editor=Victoria Pitts-Taylor |publisher=Greenwood |date=2008 |isbn=978-0-313-34145-8}}</ref>


Some of the earliest possible references to foot binding appear around 1100, when a couple of poems seemed to allude to the practice.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://trc-leiden.nl/trc-needles/index.php/component/k2/item/10758-han-chinese-footbinding |title=Han Chinese Footbinding |work=Textile Research Centre}}</ref><ref>Xu Ji 徐積 《詠蔡家婦》: 「但知勒四支,不知裹两足。」(translation: "knowing about arranging the four limbs, but not about binding her two feet); [[Su Shi]] 蘇軾 《菩薩蠻》:「塗香莫惜蓮承步,長愁羅襪凌波去;只見舞回風,都無行處踪。偷穿宮樣穩,並立雙趺困,纖妙說應難,須從掌上看。」</ref><ref name="ebrey 1">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xjoLCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA38 |title=The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period|author= Patricia Buckley Ebrey|pages=37–39 |isbn= 9780520913486 |publisher=University of California Press |date=1 December 1993}}</ref><ref name="Morris2011"/> Soon after 1148,<ref name="Morris2011"/> in the earliest extant discourse on the practice of foot binding, scholar {{Interlanguage link multi|Zhang Bangji|zh|3=張邦基}} wrote that a bound foot should be arch-shape and small.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA112#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |pages=111–115 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://wenxian.fanren8.com/08/05/5/8.htm |title=墨庄漫录-宋-张邦基 8-卷八 }}</ref> He observed that "women's footbinding began in recent times; it was not mentioned in any books from previous eras."<ref name="Morris2011">{{cite book|last=Morris|first=Ian|authorlink=Ian Morris (historian)|title=Why the West Rules - For Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qNVrfoSubmIC&pg=PA424 |date=2011|publisher=McClelland & Stewart|isbn=978-1-55199-581-6|page=424}}</ref> In the 13th century, scholar {{Interlanguage link multi|Che Ruoshui|zh|3=车若水}} wrote the first known criticism of the practice: "Little girls not yet four or five years old, who have done nothing wrong, nevertheless are made to suffer unlimited pain to bind [their feet] small. I do not know what use this is."<ref name="Morris2011"/><ref name="china chic">{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA38&lpg=PA38#v=onepage&q&f=false |pages=38–40 |title=China Chic: East Meets West|author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=Yale University Press |year= 2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://ctext.org/wiki.pl?if=gb&chapter=694711&remap=gb |title=脚气集 |author=车若水 }} Original text: 妇人纒脚不知起于何时,小儿未四五岁,无罪无辜而使之受无限之苦,纒得小来不知何用。</ref>
Some of the earliest possible references to foot binding appear around 1100, when a couple of poems seemed to allude to the practice.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://trc-leiden.nl/trc-needles/index.php/component/k2/item/10758-han-chinese-footbinding |title=Han Chinese Footbinding |work=Textile Research Centre}}</ref><ref>Xu Ji 徐積 《詠蔡家婦》: 「但知勒四支,不知裹两足。」(translation: "knowing about arranging the four limbs, but not about binding her two feet); [[Su Shi]] 蘇軾 《菩薩蠻》:「塗香莫惜蓮承步,長愁羅襪凌波去;只見舞回風,都無行處踪。偷穿宮樣穩,並立雙趺困,纖妙說應難,須從掌上看。」</ref><ref name="ebrey 1">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xjoLCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA38 |title=The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period |author=Patricia Buckley Ebrey |pages=37–39 |isbn=9780520913486 |publisher=University of California Press |date=1 December 1993}}</ref><ref name="Morris2011"/> Soon after 1148,<ref name="Morris2011"/> in the earliest extant discourse on the practice of foot binding, scholar {{Interlanguage link|Zhang Bangji|zh|3=張邦基}} wrote that a bound foot should be arch shaped and small.{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=111–115}}<ref>{{cite web |url= http://wenxian.fanren8.com/08/05/5/8.htm |title= 墨庄漫录-宋-张邦基 8-卷八 |access-date= 2015-02-21 |archive-date= 2015-02-21 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150221045249/http://wenxian.fanren8.com/08/05/5/8.htm |url-status= dead }}</ref> He observed that "women's foot binding began in recent times; it was not mentioned in any books from previous eras."<ref name="Morris2011">{{cite book |last=Morris |first=Ian |author-link=Ian Morris (historian) |title=Why the West Rules - For Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qNVrfoSubmIC&pg=PA424 |date=2011 |publisher=McClelland & Stewart |isbn=978-1-55199-581-6 |page=424}}</ref> In the 13th&nbsp;century, scholar {{Interlanguage link|Che Ruoshui|zh|3=车若水}} wrote the first known criticism of the practice: "Little girls not yet four or five years old, who have done nothing wrong, nevertheless are made to suffer unlimited pain to bind [their feet] small. I do not know what use this is."<ref name="Morris2011"/><ref name="china chic">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA38 |pages=38–40 |title=China Chic: East Meets West |author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://ctext.org/wiki.pl?if=gb&chapter=694711&remap=gb |title=脚气集 |author=车若水}} Original text: 妇人纒脚不知起于何时,小儿未四五岁,无罪无辜而使之受无限之苦,纒得小来不知何用。</ref>


The earliest archaeological evidence for foot binding dates to the tombs of Huang Sheng, who died in 1243 at the age of 17, and Madame Zhou, who died in 1274. Each had her feet bound with 6-foot-long gauze strips. Zhou's skeleton was well preserved and showed that her feet fit the narrow, pointed slippers that were buried with her.<ref name="Morris2011"/> The style of bound feet found in Song dynasty tombs, where the big toe was bent upwards, appears to be different from the norm of later eras, and the excessive smallness of the feet, the "three-inch golden lotus", may be a later development in the 16th century.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA191#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |pages=187–191 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KJHUFRTYpA4C&pg=PA24#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Every Step a Lotus: Shoes for Bound Feet|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2002 |pages=21–24 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref>
The earliest archeological evidence for foot binding dates to the tombs of Huang Sheng, who died in 1243 at the age of 17, and Madame Zhou, who died in 1274. Each woman's remains showed feet bound with gauze strips measuring {{convert|6|ft|m|1|order=flip|abbr=on}} in length. Zhou's skeleton, particularly well preserved, showed that her feet fit into the narrow, pointed slippers that were buried with her.<ref name="Morris2011"/> The style of bound feet found in Song dynasty tombs, where the big toe was bent upwards, appears to be different from the norm of later eras—an ideal known as the 'three-inch golden lotus'—may be a later development in the 16th&nbsp;century.{{sfn|Ko|2005|pp=187–191}}{{sfn|Ko|2002|pp=21–24}}


===Later eras===
===Later eras===
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 116-127-075, China, Tsingtau-Chinesin.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|left|Small bound feet were once considered beautiful while large unbound feet were judged crude]]
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 116-127-075, China, Tsingtau-Chinesin.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|left|Small bound feet were once considered beautiful while large unbound feet were judged as crude.]]


At the end of the Song dynasty, men would drink from a special shoe whose heel contained a small cup. During the [[Yuan dynasty]], some would also drink directly from the shoe itself. This practice was called "toast to the golden lotus" and lasted until the late [[Qing dynasty]].<ref name="shoe">{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/?id=2Ifj9h4Z4YQC&pg=PA164#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=The Art of the Shoe |author= Marie-Josèphe Bossan |page=164 |publisher=Parkstone Press Ltd |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-85995-803-2}}</ref>
At the end of the [[Song dynasty]], men would drink from a special shoe, the heel of which contained a small cup. During the [[Yuan dynasty]] some would also drink directly from the shoe itself. This practice was called 'toast to the golden lotus' and lasted until the late [[Qing dynasty]].<ref name="shoe">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2Ifj9h4Z4YQC&pg=PA164 |title=The Art of the Shoe |author=Marie-Josèphe Bossan |page=164 |publisher=Parkstone Press Ltd |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-85995-803-2}}</ref>


The first European to mention footbinding was the Italian missionary [[Odoric of Pordenone]] in the fourteenth century during the Yuan dynasty.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iL2AAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA196#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Women and the Family in Chinese History |first=Patricia|last= Ebrey |page=196|publisher=Routledge |isbn= 9781134442935 |date=2003-09-02 }}</ref> However, no other foreign visitors to [[Yuan dynasty|Yuan]] China mentioned the practice, including [[Ibn Battuta]] and [[Marco Polo]] (who nevertheless noted the dainty walk of Chinese women who took very small steps), perhaps an indication that it was not a widespread or extreme practice at that time.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DSfvfr8VQSEC&pg=PA55#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Marco Polo's China: A Venetian in the Realm of Khubilai Khan |first= Stephen G. |last=Haw |pages=55–56 |publisher=Routledge| isbn=9781134275427|date=2006-11-22 }}</ref> The practice however was encouraged by the Mongol rulers on their Chinese subjects.<ref name="pitts-taylor"/> The practice became increasingly common among the gentry families, later spreading to the general population, as commoners and theatre actors alike adopted footbinding. By the [[Ming dynasty|Ming period]], the practice was no longer the preserve of the gentry, but it was considered a status symbol.<ref name="Rosenlee2012">{{cite book|author=Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee|title=Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA141|date=1 February 2012|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-8179-0|pages=141–}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA37&lpg=PA37#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=37 |title=China Chic: East Meets West|author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=Yale University Press |year= 2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9 }}</ref><ref name="Wang2000">{{cite book|author=Ping Wang|title=Aching for Beauty: Footbinding in China|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cVY_cVZ9rKIC&q=mongols|year=2000|publisher=University of Minnesota Press|isbn=978-0-8166-3605-1|pages=32–}}</ref> As foot binding restricted female movement, one side effect of its rising popularity was the corresponding decline of the [[History of Chinese dance|art of dance in China]] in women, and it became increasingly rare to hear about beauties and courtesans who were also great dancers after the Song era.<ref name="hansson">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Ibp1RTW0AoC&pg=PA46&f=false#v=onepage&q&f=false |title= Chinese Outcasts: Discrimination and Emancipation in Late Imperial China|author= Anders Hansson|page=46 |publisher=Brill |year= 1996 |isbn= 978-9004105966 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=85M3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA222#v=onepage&q&f=false|title= Sexual life in ancient China:A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from Ca. 1500 B.C. Till 1644 A.D. |page=222|author=Robert Hans van Gulik |year=1961 |publisher= Brill }}</ref>
The first European to mention foot binding was the Italian missionary [[Odoric of Pordenone]] in the 14th&nbsp;century, during the Yuan dynasty.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iL2AAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA196 |title=Women and the Family in Chinese History |first=Patricia |last=Ebrey |page=196 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781134442935 |date=2003-09-02}}</ref> However no other foreign visitors to Yuan China mentioned the practice, including [[Ibn Battuta]] and [[Marco Polo]] (who nevertheless noted the dainty walk of Chinese women, who took very small steps), perhaps an indication that it was not a widespread or extreme practice at that time.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DSfvfr8VQSEC&pg=PA55 |title=Marco Polo's China: A Venetian in the Realm of Khubilai Khan |first=Stephen G. |last=Haw |pages=55–56 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781134275427 |date=2006-11-22}}</ref> The practice was encouraged by Mongol rulers for their Chinese subjects.<ref name="pitts-taylor"/> The practice became increasingly common among the gentry families, later spreading to the general populace, as commoners and theatre actors alike adopted foot binding. By the [[Ming dynasty|Ming]] period the practice was no longer the preserve of the gentry and had instead come to be considered a status symbol.<ref name="Rosenlee2012">{{cite book |author=Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee |title=Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA141 |date=1 February 2012 |publisher=SUNY Press |isbn=978-0-7914-8179-0 |pages=141–}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA37 |page=37 |title=China Chic: East Meets West |author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9}}</ref><ref name="Wang2000">{{cite book |author=Ping Wang |title=Aching for Beauty: Footbinding in China |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cVY_cVZ9rKIC&q=mongols |year=2000 |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |isbn=978-0-8166-3605-1 |pages=32–}}</ref> As foot binding restricted the movement of a woman, one side effect of its rising popularity was the corresponding decline of the [[history of Chinese dance|art of women's dance in China]], and it became increasingly rare to hear about beauties and courtesans who were also great dancers after the Song era.<ref name="hansson">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Ibp1RTW0AoC&pg=PA46 |title=Chinese Outcasts: Discrimination and Emancipation in Late Imperial China |author=Anders Hansson |page=46 |publisher=Brill |year=1996 |isbn=978-9004105966}}</ref>{{sfn|van Gulik|1961|p=222}}


[[File:Chaussure chinoise Saverne 02 05 2012 1.jpg|thumb|230px|A lotus shoe for bound feet. The ideal length for a bound foot was 3 Chinese inches (), which is around {{convert|4|in|cm|0}} in western measurement.]]
[[File:Chaussure chinoise Saverne 02 05 2012 1.jpg|thumb|230px|A lotus shoe for bound feet, [[Municipal Museum (Saverne)|Louise Weiss collection, Saverne]]]]


The [[Manchu people|Manchus]] issued a number of edicts to ban the practice, first in 1636 when the Manchu leader [[Hong Taiji]] declared the founding of the new Qing dynasty, then in 1638, and another in 1664 by the Kangxi Emperor.<ref name="Rosenlee2012"/> Few Han Chinese complied with the edicts, and Kangxi eventually abandoned the effort in 1668. By the 19th&nbsp;century, it was estimated that 40–50% of Chinese women had bound feet. Among upper class Han Chinese women, the figure was almost 100%.<ref name="lim"/> Bound feet became a mark of beauty and were also a prerequisite for finding a husband. They also became an avenue for poorer women to [[hypergamy|marry up]] in some areas, such as Sichuan.{{sfn|Brown|Bossen|Gates|Satterthwaite-Phillips|2012|pp=1035–1067}} In late 19th century Guangdong it was customary to bind the feet of the eldest daughter of a lower-class family who was intended to be brought up as a lady. Her younger sisters would grow up to be bond-servants or domestic slaves and be able to work in the fields, but the eldest daughter would be assumed never to have the need to work. Women, their families and their husbands took great pride in tiny feet, with the ideal length, called the 'Golden Lotus', being about three [[Cun (unit)|Chinese inches]] ({{lang|zh|寸}}) long—around {{convert|11|cm|in|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Gates|2014|p=8}}<ref>{{cite web |last=Manning |first=Mary Ellen |title=China's "Golden Lotus Feet" - Foot-binding Practice |url=http://travel.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474976997081 |access-date=29 January 2012 |date=10 May 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130928031927/http://travel.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474976997081 |archive-date=28 September 2013}}</ref> This pride was reflected in the elegantly embroidered silk slippers and wrappings girls and women wore to cover their feet. Handmade shoes served to exhibit the embroidery skill of the wearer as well.<ref name="bossen brown gates">{{Cite journal|last1=Bossen|first1=Laurel|last2=Xurui|first2=Wang|last3=Brown|first3=Melissa J.|last4=Gates|first4=Hill|date=2011|title=Feet and Fabrication: Footbinding and Early Twentieth-Century Rural Women's Labor in Shaanxi|journal=Modern China|volume=37|issue=4|pages=347–383|doi=10.1177/0097700411403265|jstor=23053328|pmid=21966702|s2cid=44529240|issn=0097-7004}}</ref> These shoes also served as support, as some women with bound feet might not have been able to walk without the support of their shoes and would have been severely limited in their mobility.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NieEnuWegkoC&pg=PA302 |title=Film Review — ''Footbinding: Search for the Three Inch Golden Lotus'' |journal=Anthropologica |date=2004 |volume=48 |issue=2 |first=Laurel |last=Bossen |pages=301–303 |doi=10.2307/25606208 |jstor=25606208}}</ref> Contrary to missionary writings, many women with bound feet were able to walk and work in the fields, albeit with greater limitations than their non-bound counterparts.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=66}}
The Manchus issued a number of edicts to ban the practice, first in 1636 when the Manchu leader [[Hong Taiji]] declared the founding of the new Qing dynasty, then in 1638, and another in 1664 by the [[Kangxi Emperor]].<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dYgQWAfHjmsC&pg=PA144#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation|author= Li-Hsiang, Lisa Rosenlee |page=144 |publisher= State University of New York Press |year= 2007 |isbn=978-0-7914-6750-3 }}</ref> However, few Han Chinese complied with the edicts and Kangxi eventually abandoned the effort in 1668.
By the 19th century, it was estimated that 40-50% of Chinese women had bound feet, and among upper class Han Chinese women, the figure was almost 100%.<ref name="lim" /> Bound feet became a mark of beauty and were also a prerequisite for finding a husband. They also became an avenue for poorer women to [[Hypergamy|marry into money]] in some areas; for example, in late 19th century Guangdong, it was customary to bind the feet of the eldest daughter of a lower-class family who was intended to be brought up as a lady. Her younger sisters would grow up to be bond-servants or domestic slaves and be able to work in the fields, but the eldest daughter would be assumed to never have the need to work. Women, their families and their husbands took great pride in tiny feet, with the ideal length, called the "Golden Lotus," being about three [[Cun (unit)|Chinese inches]] long (around {{convert|4|in|cm|0}} in Western measurement).<ref>{{cite book |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|author= Hill Gates |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jEK2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PA8#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=8 |publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Manning|first=Mary Ellen|title=China's "Golden Lotus Feet" - Foot-binding Practice|url=http://travel.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474976997081|accessdate=29 January 2012|date=10 May 2007|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130928031927/http://travel.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474976997081|archivedate=28 September 2013|df=}}</ref> This pride was reflected in the elegantly embroidered silk slippers and wrappings girls and women wore to cover their feet. Walking on bound feet necessitated bending the knees slightly and swaying to maintain proper movement and balance, a dainty walk that was also considered to be erotically attractive to some men.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity |author= Janell L. Carroll |url=https://books.google.com/?id=9X8EAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA8#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=8 |publisher=Cengage Learning |year= 2009 |isbn=978-0-495-60499-0 }}</ref>


Some women with bound feet might not have been able to walk without the support of their shoes and thus would have been severely limited in their mobility.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NieEnuWegkoC&pg=PA302&lpg=PA302#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Film Review - Footbinding: Search for the Three Inch Golden Lotus |journal=Anthropologica |date=2004 |volume=48|issue=2|first=Laurel |last=Bossen |pages=301–303 }}</ref> However, many women with bound feet were still able to walk and work in the fields, albeit with greater limitations than their non-bound counterparts. In the 19th and early 20th century, dancers with bound feet were popular, as were circus performers who stood on prancing or running horses. Women with bound feet in one village in [[Yunnan]] Province even formed a regional dance troupe to perform for tourists in the late 20th century, though age has since forced the group to retire.<ref name=wsj /> In other areas, women in their 70s and 80s could be found providing limited assistance to the workers in the rice fields well into the 21st century.<ref name="lim" />
In the 19th and early 20th&nbsp;centuries, there were dancers with bound feet as well as circus performers who stood on prancing or running horses. Women with bound feet in one village in [[Yunnan]] Province formed a regional dance troupe to perform for tourists in the late 20th&nbsp;century, though age has since forced the group to retire.<ref name=wsj/> In other areas, women in their 70s and 80s assisted in the rice fields (albeit in a limited capacity) even into the early 21st&nbsp;century.<ref name="lim"/>


=== Demise ===
=== Decline ===
Opposition to foot binding had been raised by some Chinese writers in the 18th century. In the mid-19th century, many of the rebel leaders of the [[Taiping Rebellion]] were of Hakka background whose women did not bind their feet, and foot binding was outlawed.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TYjGN4UM1mMC&pg=PA226&lpg=PA226#v=onepage&q&f=false |pages=27–29 |title=The Taiping Ideology: Its Sources, Interpretations, and Influences|author1=Vincent Yu-Chung Shih |author2=Yu-chung Shi |publisher=University of Washington Press|year=1968 |isbn=978-0-295-73957-1 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UBqr_MEn4m4C&pg=PA57#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=For Our Daughters: How Outstanding Women Worldwide Have Balanced Home and Career|author= Olivia Cox-Fill|page=57|publisher=Praeger Publishers |year= 1996|isbn= 978-0-275-95199-3 }}</ref> The rebellion however failed, and Christian missionaries, who had provided education for girls and actively discouraged what they considered a barbaric practice, then played a part in changing elite opinion on footbinding through education, [[pamphleteering]], and lobbying of the Qing court.<ref name="blake 1" /><ref name=edwards>{{cite book |title=The Cross-cultural Study of Women: A Comprehensive Guide|author= Mary I. Edwards |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cshaqqoV-kMC&pg=PA255#v=onepage&q&f=false |pages=255–256|publisher=Feminist Press at The City University of New York |year= 1986 |isbn=978-0-935312-02-7 }}</ref> The earliest-known Western anti-foot binding society, ''Jie Chan Zu Hui'' (截纏足会), was formed in Xiamen in 1874.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Whitefield|first=Brent|date=2008|title=The Tian Zu Hui (Natural Foot Society): Christian Women in China and the Fight against Footbinding|url=http://www.uky.edu/Centers/Asia/SECAAS/Seras/2008/25_Whitefield_2008.pdf|journal=Southeast Review of Asian Studies|volume=30|pages=203–12|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418235159/http://www.uky.edu/Centers/Asia/SECAAS/Seras/2008/25_Whitefield_2008.pdf|archivedate =18 April 2016}}</ref> In 1875, 60-70 Christian women in [[Xiamen]] led by Alicia Little attended a meeting presided over by a missionary John MacGowan formed the Natural Foot (''tianzu'', literally Heavenly Foot) Society.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA14&lpg=PA14#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |pages=14–16 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref> It was then championed by the Woman's Christian Temperance Movement founded in 1883 and advocated by [[Mission (Christian)|missionaries]] including [[Timothy Richard]], who thought that Christianity could promote [[Christian feminism|equality between the sexes]].<ref name="GoossaertPalmer2011">{{cite book|author1=Vincent Goossaert|author2=David A. Palmer|title=The Religious Question in Modern China|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bx83dlLMPdMC&pg=PA70|accessdate=31 July 2012|date=15 April 2011|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-30416-8|pages=70–}}</ref>
Opposition to foot binding had been raised by some Chinese writers in the 18th century. In the mid-19th century, many of the leaders of the [[Taiping Rebellion]] were men of [[Hakka]] background whose women did not bind their feet, and they outlawed foot binding in areas under their control.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TYjGN4UM1mMC&pg=PA226 |pages=27–29 |title=The Taiping Ideology: Its Sources, Interpretations, and Influences |author1=Vincent Yu-Chung Shih |author2=Yu-chung Shi |publisher=University of Washington Press |year=1968 |isbn=978-0-295-73957-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UBqr_MEn4m4C&pg=PA57 |title=For Our Daughters: How Outstanding Women Worldwide Have Balanced Home and Career |author=Olivia Cox-Fill |page=57 |publisher=Praeger Publishers |year=1996|isbn=978-0-275-95199-3}}</ref> However the rebellion failed and Christian missionaries, who had provided education for girls and actively discouraged what they considered a barbaric practice that had deleterious social effect on women,{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=46}} then played a part in changing elite opinion on foot binding through education, [[pamphleteering]] and lobbying of the Qing court,<ref name="blake 1"/><ref name=edwards>{{cite book |title=The Cross-cultural Study of Women: A Comprehensive Guide |author= Mary I. Edwards |url=https://archive.org/details/crossculturalstu00dule |url-access=registration |pages=[https://archive.org/details/crossculturalstu00dule/page/255 255]–256 |publisher=Feminist Press at The City University of New York |year=1986 |isbn=978-0-935312-02-7}}</ref> as no other culture in the world practised the custom of foot binding.<ref name=mackie />

The earliest-known Western anti-foot binding society was formed in Amoy ([[Xiamen]]) in 1874. 60–70 Christian women in Xiamen attended a meeting presided over by a missionary, John MacGowan, and formed the Natural Foot Society ({{transliteration|zh|Tianzu Hui}} {{lang|zh|(天足会)}}, literally [[Heavenly Foot Society]]).{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=14–17}}<ref name=":0">{{cite journal |last=Whitefield |first=Brent |date=2008 |title=The Tian Zu Hui (Natural Foot Society): Christian Women in China and the Fight against Footbinding |url=http://www.uky.edu/Centers/Asia/SECAAS/Seras/2008/25_Whitefield_2008.pdf |journal=Southeast Review of Asian Studies |volume=30 |pages=203–12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418235159/http://www.uky.edu/Centers/Asia/SECAAS/Seras/2008/25_Whitefield_2008.pdf |archive-date =18 April 2016}}</ref> MacGowan held the view that foot binding was a serious problem that called into doubt the whole of Chinese civilization; he felt that "the nefarious civilization interferes with Divine Nature."<ref>{{cite journal |title=Secularizing the Pain of Footbinding in China: Missionary and Medical Stagings of the Universal Body |first=Angela|last= Zito|journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion |volume= 75|number= 1 |date=March 2007|pages= 1–24|doi=10.1093/jaarel/lfl062 |jstor=4139836 |pmid=20681094 }}</ref> Members of the Heavenly Foot Society vowed not to bind their daughters' feet.<ref name=mackie>{{Cite journal|last=Mackie|first=Gerry|date=1996|title=Ending Footbinding and Infibulation: A Convention Account|journal=American Sociological Review|volume=61|issue=6|pages=999–1017|doi=10.2307/2096305|jstor=2096305|issn=0003-1224}}</ref>{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=46}} In 1895, Christian women in [[Shanghai]] led by [[Alicia Little]], also formed a [[The Tian Zu Hui|Natural Foot Society]].<ref name=":0"/>{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=14–16}} It was also championed by the Woman's Christian Temperance Movement founded in 1883 and advocated by [[Mission (Christian)|missionaries]] including [[Timothy Richard]], who thought that Christianity could promote [[Christian feminism|equality between the sexes]].<ref name="GoossaertPalmer2011">{{cite book |author1=Vincent Goossaert |author2=David A. Palmer |title=The Religious Question in Modern China |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bx83dlLMPdMC&pg=PA70 |access-date=31 July 2012 |date=15 April 2011 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-226-30416-8 |pages=70–}}</ref> This missionary-led opposition had stronger impacts than earlier Han or Manchu opposition.<ref name=drucker>Drucker, "The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement 1840-1911", in ''Historical Reflections'' (1981), 182.</ref> Western missionaries established the first schools for girls, and encouraged women to end the practice of foot binding.<ref>Rachel Keeling. "The Anti-Footbinding Movement, 1872-1922: A Cause for China Rather Than Chinese Women", in ''Social and Political Movements'' 1 (2008), 12.</ref> Christian missionaries did not conceal their shock and disgust either when explaining the process of foot binding to Western peers and their descriptions shocked their audience back home.<ref name=drucker />


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Reform-minded Chinese intellectuals began to consider footbinding to be an aspect of their culture that needed to be eliminated.<ref name="Levy">{{cite book|last=Levy|first=Howard S.|title=The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Tradition of Foot Binding in China|year=1991|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=New York|page=322}}</ref> In the 1883, [[Kang Youwei]] founded the [[Foot Emancipation Society|Anti-Footbinding Society]] near [[Guangzhou|Canton]] to combat the practice, and anti-footbinding societies sprang up across the country, with membership for the movement claimed to reach 300,000.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5agGK-l369UC&pg=PA257&lpg=PA257#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835–1935|author= Guangqiu Xu |publisher=Transaction Publishers |date= 2011 |page=257 |isbn= 978-1-4128-1829-2 }}</ref> The anti-footbinding movement however stressed pragmatic and patriotic reasons rather than feminist ones, arguing that abolition of footbinding would lead to better health and more efficient labour.<ref name=edwards /> Reformers such as [[Liang Qichao]], influenced by [[Social Darwinism]], also argued that it weakened the nation, since enfeebled women supposedly produced weak sons.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zohVoj_Xq5MC&pg=PA51#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=The Chinese Medical Ministries of Kang Cheng and Shi Meiyu, 1872–1937|author= Connie A. Shemo |page=51 |publisher=Lehigh University Press |year=2011 |isbn= 978-1-61146-086-5 }}</ref> At the turn of the 20th century, early [[feminist]]s, such as [[Qiu Jin]], called for the end of foot-binding.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qQ5VtyB0EgsC&pg=PA63&lpg=PA63#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Chinese Women in Christian Ministry|author= Mary Keng Mun Chung |publisher=Peter Lang Publishing Inc |date= 1 May 2005 |isbn= 978-0-8204-5198-5 }}</ref><ref name="qiu jin">{{cite web |url= http://www.executedtoday.com/2011/07/15/1907-qiu-jin-chinese-feminist-and-revolutionary/ |title=1907: Qiu Jin, Chinese feminist and revolutionary|date=July 15, 2011 |work=ExecutedToday.com }}</ref> Many members of anti-footbinding groups pledged to not bind their daughters' feet nor to allow their sons to marry women with bound feet.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/24/magazine/24FOB-Footbinding-t.html|title=The Art of Social Change: Campaigns against foot-binding and genital mutilation.|last=Appiah|first=Kwame Anthony|date=2010-10-22|work=The New York Times|access-date=2017-09-03|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> In 1902, the [[Empress Dowager Cixi]] issued an anti-foot binding edict, but it was soon rescinded.<ref>"[http://www.historychannel.com.au/classroom/day-in-history/409/cixi-outlaws-foot-binding Cixi Outlaws Foot Binding]", ''History Channel''</ref>
Reform-minded Chinese intellectuals began to consider foot binding to be an aspect of their culture that needed to be eliminated.<ref name="Levy">{{cite book |last=Levy |first=Howard S. |title=The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Tradition of Foot Binding in China |year=1991 |publisher=Prometheus Books |location=New York |page=322}}</ref> In 1883, [[Kang Youwei]] founded the [[Foot Emancipation Society|Anti-footbinding Society]] near [[Guangzhou|Canton]] to combat the practice, and anti-foot binding societies appeared across the country, with membership for the movement claimed to reach 300,000.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5agGK-l369UC&pg=PA257 |title=American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835–1935 |author=Guangqiu Xu |publisher=Transaction Publishers |date= 2011 |page=257 |isbn=978-1-4128-1829-2}}</ref>{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=67}} The anti-foot binding movement stressed pragmatic and patriotic reasons rather than feminist ones, arguing that abolition of foot binding would lead to better health and more efficient labour. Kang Youwei submitted a petition to the throne commenting on the fact that China had become a joke to foreigners and that "footbinding was the primary object of such ridicule."<ref name="Keeling. 2008">Keeling. "The Anti-Footbinding Movement, 1872-1922: A Cause for China Rather Than Chinese Women", in ''Social and Political Movements'' 1 (2008), 14.</ref>
Reformers such as [[Liang Qichao]], influenced by [[Social Darwinism]], also argued that it weakened the nation, since enfeebled women supposedly produced weak sons.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zohVoj_Xq5MC&pg=PA51 |title=The Chinese Medical Ministries of Kang Cheng and Shi Meiyu, 1872–1937 |author=Connie A. Shemo |page=51 |publisher=Lehigh University Press |year=2011 |isbn=978-1-61146-086-5}}</ref> In his "On Women's Education", Liang Qichao asserts that the root cause of national weakness inevitably lies the lack of education for women. Qichao connected education for women and foot binding: "As long as foot binding remains in practice, women's education can never flourish."<ref>Liang Qichao. "On Women's Education", in The Birth of Chinese Feminism: Essential Texts in Transnational Theory, by Lydia He Liu, Rebecca E. Karl and Dorothy Ko (Columbia University Press, 2013), 202.</ref> Qichao was also disappointed that foreigners had opened the first schools as he thought that the Chinese should be teaching Chinese women.<ref name="Keeling. 2008"/> At the turn of the 20th century, early [[feminist]]s, such as [[Qiu Jin]], called for the end of foot binding.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qQ5VtyB0EgsC&pg=PA63 |title=Chinese Women in Christian Ministry |author=Mary Keng Mun Chung |publisher=Peter Lang |date=1 May 2005 |isbn=978-0-8204-5198-5}}</ref><ref name="qiu jin">{{cite web |url=http://www.executedtoday.com/2011/07/15/1907-qiu-jin-chinese-feminist-and-revolutionary/ |title=1907: Qiu Jin, Chinese feminist and revolutionary |date=July 15, 2011 |work=ExecutedToday.com}}</ref> In 1906, Zhao Zhiqian wrote in ''Beijing Women's News'' to blame women with bound feet for being a national weakness in the eyes of other nations.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|pp=67-68}} Many members of anti-foot binding groups pledged to not bind their daughters' feet nor to allow their sons to marry women with bound feet.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/24/magazine/24FOB-Footbinding-t.html |title=The Art of Social Change: Campaigns against foot-binding and genital mutilation |last=Appiah |first=Kwame Anthony |date=2010-10-22 |work=The New York Times |access-date=2017-09-03 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> In 1902, [[Empress Dowager Cixi]] issued an anti-foot binding edict, but it was soon rescinded.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}}


In 1912, the new [[Republic of China (1912–49)|Republic of China]] government banned foot binding (though not actively implemented),<ref name="ko2"/> and leading intellectuals of the [[May Fourth Movement]] saw footbinding as a major symbol of China's backwardness.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EisnZHAMbqkC&pg=PA8#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Science and Football III |editors=Thomas Reilly, Jens Bangsbo, A Mark Williams|author=Wang Ke-wen |publisher=Taylor & Francis|year= 1996 |page=8 |isbn=978-0-419-22160-9 }}</ref> Local warlords such as [[Yan Xishan]] in Shanxi engaged in their own sustained campaign against footbinding with feet inspectors and fines for those who continued with the practice,<ref name="ko2">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA50&lpg=PA50#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |pages=50–63 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref> while regional governments of the later [[Nanjing decade|Nanjing regime]] also enforced the ban.<ref name="blake 1" /> The campaign against footbinding was very successful in some regions; in one province, a 1929 survey showed that whereas only 2.3% of girls born before 1910 had unbound feet, 95% of those born after were not bound.<ref name=end>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA427#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide|author= Mary White Stewart |pages=4237–428 |publisher= Praeger|date=27 January 2014 |isbn=978-1-4408-2937-6}}</ref> In a region south of Beijing, [[Dingzhou|Dingxian]], where over 99% of women were once bound, no new cases were found among those born after 1919.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JSF8AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA64&lpg=PA64#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Activists beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics|authors= Margaret E. Keck, Kathryn Sikkink |pages=64–65 |publisher=Cornell University Press |year= 1998 |isbn= 978-0-8014-8456-8 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |jstor=2770363|title=The Disappearance of Foot-Binding in Tinghsien|author=Sidney D. Gamble|journal=American Journal of Sociology |volume= 49 |issue= 2 |date=September 1943|pages= 181–183 |doi=10.1086/219351}}</ref> In Taiwan, the practice was also discouraged by the ruling Japanese from the beginning of [[Taiwan under Japanese rule|Japanese rule]], and from 1911 to 1915 it was gradually made illegal.<ref>Hu, Alex. ''The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement''. Historical Reflections, Vol. 8, No. 3, Women in China: Current Directions in Historical Scholarship, Fall 1981, pp. 179-199. " Besides improvements in civil engineering, progress was made in social areas as well. The traditional Chinese practice of foot binding was widespread in Taiwan's early years. Traditional Chinese society perceived women with smaller feet as being more beautiful. Women would bind their feet with long bandages to stunt growth.
In 1912 the new [[Republic of China (1912–1949)|Republic of China]] government banned foot binding, though the ban was not actively implemented,{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=50–63}} and leading intellectuals of the [[May Fourth Movement]] saw foot binding as a major symbol of China's backwardness.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EisnZHAMbqkC&pg=PA8 |title=Science and Football III |editor1-first=Thomas |editor1-last=Reilly |editor2-first=Jens |editor2-last=Bangsbo |editor3-first=A. Mark |editor3-last=Williams |author=Wang Ke-wen |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year= 1996 |page=8 |isbn=978-0-419-22160-9}}</ref> Provincial leaders, such as [[Yan Xishan]] in Shanxi, engaged in their own sustained campaign against foot binding with foot inspectors and fines for those who continued the practice,{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=50–63}} while regional governments of the later [[Nanjing decade|Nanjing regime]] also enforced the ban.<ref name="blake 1"/> The campaign against foot binding was successful in some regions. In one province, a 1929 survey showed that, while only 2.3% of girls born before 1910 had unbound feet, 95% of those born after were not bound.<ref name=end>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA427 |title=Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide |author=Mary White Stewart |pages=4237–428 |publisher=Praeger |date=27 January 2014 |isbn=978-1-4408-2937-6}}</ref> In a region south of [[Beijing]], [[Dingzhou|Dingxian]], where over 99% of women once had bound feet, no new cases were found among those born after 1919.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JSF8AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA64 |title=Activists beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics |first1=Margaret E.|last1=Keck |first2=Kathryn |last2=Sikkink |pages=64–65 |publisher=Cornell University Press |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-8014-8456-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |jstor=2770363 |title=The Disappearance of Foot-Binding in Tinghsien |first=Sidney D. |last=Gamble |journal=American Journal of Sociology |volume=49 |issue=2 |date=September 1943 |pages=181–183 |doi=10.1086/219351 |s2cid=72732576}}</ref> In Taiwan, the practice was also discouraged by the ruling Japanese from the beginning of [[Taiwan under Japanese rule|Japanese rule]], and from 1911 to 1915 it was gradually made illegal.<ref>Hu, Alex. "The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement". ''Historical Reflections'', Vol. 8, No. 3, Women in China: Current Directions in Historical Scholarship, Fall 1981, pp. 179–199. "Besides improvements in civil engineering, progress was made in social areas as well. The traditional Chinese practice of foot binding was widespread in Taiwan's early years. Traditional Chinese society perceived women with smaller feet as being more beautiful. Women would bind their feet with long bandages to stunt growth; housemaids were divided into those with bound feet and those without. The former served the daughters of the house, while the latter were assigned heavier work. This practice was later regarded as barbaric. In the early years of the Japanese colonial period, the Foot-binding Liberation Society was established to promote the idea of natural feet, but its influence was limited. The fact that women suffered higher casualties in the 1906 Meishan quake with 551 men and 700 women dead and 1,099 men and 1,334 women injured—very different from the situation in Japan—raised public concern. Foot binding was blamed and this gave impetus to the drive to stamp out the practice."</ref> The practice lingered on in some regions in China. In 1928, a census in rural [[Shanxi]] found that 18% of women had bound feet,<ref name=wsj>{{cite web |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB125800116737444883 |title=Bound by History: The Last of China's 'Lotus-Feet' Ladies |author=Simon Montlake |date=November 13, 2009 |work=Wall Street Journal}}</ref> while in some remote rural areas, such as Yunnan Province, it continued to be practiced until the 1950s.<ref>Favazza, Armando R. (2011), ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=xmdKklZM9-kC&q=foot+binding+1902 Bodies under Siege: Self-mutilation, Nonsuicidal Self-injury, and Body Modification in Culture and Psychiatry]'', p. 118.</ref><ref>Gillet, Kit (16 April 2012). [https://www.latimes.com/world/la-xpm-2012-apr-16-la-fg-china-bound-feet-20120416-story.html "In China, foot binding slowly slips into history"]. ''The Los Angeles Times''.</ref> In most parts of China the practice had virtually disappeared by 1949.<ref name=end/> The practice was also stigmatized in Communist China, and the last vestiges of foot binding were stamped out, with the last new case of foot binding reported in 1957.<ref>Li Xiu-ying. [http://exhibits.hsl.virginia.edu/clothes/lady_bound/ "Women with Bound Feet in China: Cessation of Bound Feet during the Communist Era"]. University of Virginia. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200731081735/http://exhibits.hsl.virginia.edu/clothes/lady_bound/|date=2020-07-31}}. Excerpts from ''When I was a girl in China'', stories collected by Joseph Rupp.</ref>{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=4}} By the 21st&nbsp;century, only a few elderly women in China still had bound feet.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2015/jun/15/unbound-chinas-last-lotus-feet-in-pictures |title=Unbound: China's last 'lotus feet' – in pictures |date=15 June 2015 |work=The Guardian}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.slate.com/blogs/behold/2015/05/21/jo_farrell_the_photographer_travels_across_china_to_document_women_who_had.html |title=Traveling Across China to Tell the Story of a Generation of Women With Bound Feet |date=May 21, 2015 |first=David |last=Rosenberg |work=Slate}}</ref> In 1999, the last shoe factory making lotus shoes, the Zhiqian Shoe Factory in [[Harbin]], closed.{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=9}}<ref>{{Cite web |last=X |date=2002-04-08 |title=The Shoes Fit, but Feet Grow Rare |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2002-apr-08-mn-36773-story.html |access-date=2024-08-03 |website=Los Angeles Times |language=en-US}}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=August 2024}}
Even housemaids were divided into those with bound feet and those without. The former served the daughters of the house, while the latter were assigned heavier work. This practice was later regarded as barbaric. In the early years of the Japanese colonial period, the Foot-binding Liberation Society was established to promote the idea of natural feet, but its influence was limited.
The fact that women suffered higher casualties in the 1906 Meishan quake with 551 men and 700 women dead, and 1,099 men and 1,334 women injured--very different from the situation in Japan--raised public concern. Foot binding was blamed and this gave impetus to the drive to stamp out the practice."</ref> The practice however lingered on in some regions in China; in 1928, a census in rural [[Shanxi]] found that 18% of women had bound feet,<ref name=wsj>{{cite web |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB125800116737444883 |title=Bound by History: The Last of China's 'Lotus-Feet' Ladies |author= Simon Montlake |date = November 13, 2009 |work=Wall Street Journal }}</ref> while in some remote rural areas such as [[Yunnan Province]] it continued to be practised until the 1950s.<ref>Favazza, Armando R. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=xmdKklZM9-kC&dq=foot+binding+1902&source=gbs_navlinks_s Bodies under Siege: Self-mutilation, Nonsuicidal Self-injury, and Body Modification in Culture and Psychiatry]'' (2011), p. 118.</ref><ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/2012/apr/16/world/la-fg-china-bound-feet-20120416 "In China, foot binding slowly slips into history"]. Kit Gillet. ''Los Angeles Times''. April 2012.</ref> In most parts of China, however, the practice had virtually disappeared by 1949.<ref name=end /> The practice was also stigmatized in Communist China, and the last vestiges of women footbinding were forcibly stamped out, with the last new case of footbinding reported in 1957.<ref>[http://exhibits.hsl.virginia.edu/clothes/lady_bound/ "Women with Bound Feet in China"]. ''University of Virginia.</ref><ref>''Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding.'' Ko, Alice. University of California Press. 2007. 978-0520253902. "The last case of girls binding ever occurred in 1957.</ref> By the 21st century, only a few elderly women in China still have bound feet.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2015/jun/15/unbound-chinas-last-lotus-feet-in-pictures |title=Unbound: China's last 'lotus feet' – in pictures |date=15 June 2015 |work=The Guardian }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.slate.com/blogs/behold/2015/05/21/jo_farrell_the_photographer_travels_across_china_to_document_women_who_had.html |title= Traveling Across China to Tell the Story of a Generation of Women With Bound Feet |date=May 21, 2015 |author= David Rosenberg |work=Slate }}</ref> In 1999, the last shoe factory making lotus shoes, the Zhiqiang Shoe Factory in [[Harbin]], closed.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA9&lpg=PA9#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |page=9 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref>


==Practice==
==Practice==
=== Variations and prevalence ===
=== Variations and prevalence ===
[[File:Natural vs. bound feet comparison, 1902.JPG|thumb|left|A comparison between a woman with normal feet (left) and a woman with bound feet in 1902]]
[[File:Natural vs. bound feet comparison, 1902.JPG|thumb|left|A comparison between a woman with un-bound feet (left) and a woman with bound feet in 1902]]


Foot binding was practised in various forms and its prevalence varied in different regions. A less severe form in Sichuan, called "cucumber foot" (''huanggua jiao'') due to its slender shape, folded the four toes under but did not distort the heel and taper the ankle.<ref name=wsj /><ref>{{cite book |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|author= Hill Gates |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jEK2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PA7#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=7 |publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}</ref> Some working women in [[Jiangsu]] made a pretense of binding while keeping their feet natural.<ref name="blake 1">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=EFI7tr9XK6EC&pg=RA1-PA327#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History |author=C Fred Blake|pages=327–329|editor= Bonnie G. Smith |publisher=OUP USA |year= 2008 |isbn=978-0-19-514890-9 }}</ref> Not all women were always bound—some women once bound remained bound all through their lives, but some were only briefly bound, and some were bound only until their marriage.<ref>{{cite book |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|author= Hill Gates |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QUK2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PT40#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=20 |publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}</ref> Footbinding was most common among women whose work involved domestic crafts and those in urban areas;<ref name="blake 1" /> it was also more common in northern China where it was widely practised by women of all social classes, but less so in parts of southern China such as [[Guangdong]] and [[Guangxi]] where it was largely a practice of women in the provincial capitals or among the gentry.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R-a2moz_taMC&pg=PT314&lpg=PT314#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=World History|editor1=William Duiker |editor2=Jackson Spielvoge |publisher=Wadsworth Publishing Co Inc|edition= 7th Revised |page= 282 |year= 2012 |isbn= 978-1-111-83165-3}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=LCrB5770A5UC&pg=PA131&lpg=PA131#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |pages=111–115 |isbn=978-0-520-21884-0 }}</ref>
Foot binding was practised in various forms and its prevalence varied in different regions.<ref name="fujian"/> A less severe form in Sichuan, called "cucumber foot" ({{transliteration|zh|huángguā jiǎo}} {{lang|zh|黃瓜腳}}) due to its slender shape, folded the four toes under but did not distort the heel or taper the ankle.<ref name=wsj />{{sfn|Gates|2014|p=7}} Some working women in [[Jiangsu]] made a pretence of binding while keeping their feet natural.<ref name="blake 1">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EFI7tr9XK6EC&pg=RA1-PA327 |title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History |first=C. Fred |last=Blake|pages=327–329|editor= Bonnie G. Smith |publisher=Oxford University Press USA |year= 2008 |isbn=978-0-19-514890-9 }}</ref> Not all women were always bound—some women once bound remained bound throughout their lives, some were only briefly bound and some were bound until marriage.{{sfn|Gates|2014|p=20}} Foot binding was most common among women whose work involved domestic [[craft]]s and those in urban areas;<ref name="blake 1" /> it was also more common in northern China, where it was widely practised by women of all social classes, but less so in parts of southern China such as [[Guangdong]] and [[Guangxi]], where it was largely a practice of women in the provincial capitals or among the gentry.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R-a2moz_taMC&pg=PT314 |title=World History|editor1=William Duiker |editor2=Jackson Spielvoge |publisher=Wadsworth |edition= 7th Revised |page= 282 |year= 2012 |isbn= 978-1-111-83165-3}}</ref>{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=111–115}} Feet were bound to their smallest in the northern provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Shanxi and Shaanxi, but the binding was less extreme and less common in the southern provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan and Guizhou, where not all daughters of the wealthy had bound feet.{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=139}} Foot binding limited the mobility of girls, so they became engaged in handwork from childhood.<ref name="bossen brown gates" /> It is thought that the necessity for female labour in the fields owing to a longer growing season in the South and the impracticability of bound feet working in wet rice fields limited the spread of the practice in the countryside of the South.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|p=100}} However some farming women bound their daughter's feet, but "the process began later than in elite families, and feet were bound more loosely among the poor."{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=15}}


[[File:Shoes for a Manchu noblewoman, China, Qing dynasty, mid 1800s AD, silk, wood - Textile Museum, George Washington University - DSC09970.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|The Manchu "flower bowl" shoes designed to imitate bound feet, mid 1880s.]]
[[File:Shoes for a Manchu noblewoman, China, Qing dynasty, mid 1800s AD, silk, wood - Textile Museum, George Washington University - DSC09970.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|The Manchu "flower bowl" shoes designed to imitate bound feet, mid-1880s]]
[[Manchu people|Manchu]] women, as well as Mongol and Chinese women in the [[Eight Banners]], did not bind their feet, and the most a Manchu woman might do was to wrap the feet tightly to give them a slender appearance.<ref name="manchu">{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/?id=_qtgoTIAiKUC&pg=PA247#v=onepage&q&f=false|last=Elliott|first=Mark C.|title=The Manchu Way: the Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China|year=2001|publisher=Stanford University Press|location=Stanford, CA|isbn=978-0-8047-3606-0|pages=246–249}}</ref> The Manchus, wanting to emulate the particular gait that bound feet necessitated, adapted their own form of platform shoes to cause them to walk in a similar swaying manner. These "flower bowl" (花盆鞋) or "horse-hoof" shoes (馬蹄鞋) have a platform generally made of wood two to six inches in height and fitted to the middle of the sole, or they have a small central tapered pedestal. Many Han Chinese in the Inner City of Beijing also did not bind their feet, and it was reported in the mid-1800s that around 50-60% of non-banner women had unbound feet. Bound feet nevertheless became a significant differentiating marker between Han women and Manchu or other banner women.<ref name="manchu" />
[[Manchu people|Manchu]] women, as well as Mongol and Chinese women in the [[Eight Banners]], did not bind their feet. The most a Manchu woman might do was to wrap the feet tightly to give them a slender appearance.<ref name="manchu">{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=_qtgoTIAiKUC&pg=PA247|last=Elliott|first=Mark C.|title=The Manchu Way: the Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China|year=2001|publisher=Stanford University Press|location=Stanford, California|isbn=978-0-8047-3606-0|pages=246–249}}</ref> The Manchus, wanting to emulate the particular gait that bound feet necessitated, adapted their own form of platform shoes to cause them to walk in a similar swaying manner. These [[Manchu platform shoes]] were known as "flower bowl" shoes ({{Lang-zh|c=花盆鞋|p=Huāpénxié}}) or "horse-hoof" shoes ({{Lang-zh|c=馬蹄鞋|p=Mǎtíxié}}); they have a platform generally made of wood {{convert|2|–|6|in|cm|sp=us|order=flip|sigfig=1|abbr=on}} in height and fitted to the middle of the sole, or they have a small central tapered pedestal. Many [[Han Chinese]] in the Inner City of Beijing did not bind their feet either, and it was reported in the mid-1800s that around 50–60% of non-banner women had unbound feet. Han immigrant women to the Northeast came under Manchu influence and abandoned foot binding.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|pp=144–163}} Bound feet nevertheless became a significant differentiating marker between Han women and Manchu or other banner women.<ref name="manchu" />


The [[Hakka people|Hakka]] people however were unusual among Han Chinese in not practicing foot binding at all.<ref>Lawrence Davis, Edward (2005). [https://books.google.com/books?id=2rLBvrlKI7QC&pg=PA333 ''Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture''], [[Routledge]], p. 333.</ref> Most non-Han Chinese people, such as the Manchus, Mongols and Tibetans, did not bind their feet; however, some non-Han ethnic groups did. Foot binding was practised by the [[Hui people|Hui Muslims]] in [[Gansu]] Province,<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/?id=eEwTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA893&dq=dungan+foot+binding#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=Encyclopædia of religion and ethics, Volume 8|author1=James Hastings |author2=John Alexander Selbie |author3=Louis Herbert Gray |year=1916|publisher=T. & T. Clark|location=EDINBURGH|isbn= |page= 893|pages=|accessdate=January 1, 2011}}(Original from Harvard University)</ref> the [[Dungan people|Dungan Muslims]], descendants of Hui from northwestern China who fled to central Asia, were also seen practicing foot binding up to 1948.<ref>{{cite book| author = Touraj Atabaki, Sanjyot Mehendale|author2=Sanjyot Mehendale| title = Central Asia and the Caucasus: transnationalism and diaspora| url = https://books.google.com/?id=OWMyFWAZLCwC| accessdate = January 1, 2011| year = 2005| publisher = Psychology Press| isbn = 978-0-415-33260-6| page = 31 }}</ref> In southern China, in [[Guangzhou]], 19th century Scottish scholar [[James Legge]] noted a mosque that had a placard denouncing foot binding, saying Islam did not allow it since it constituted violating the creation of God.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fpcuAAAAYAAJ&q=mohammedan#v=snippet&q=mohammedan&f=false|title=The religions of China: Confucianism and Tâoism described and compared with Christianity|author=James Legge|year=1880|publisher=Hodder and Stoughton|location=LONDON|page=111|isbn=|pages=|accessdate=June 28, 2010}}(Original from Harvard University)</ref><!-- Implying that they bound their feet? -->
The [[Hakka people]] were unusual among Han Chinese in not practising foot binding.<ref>Lawrence Davis, Edward (2005). [https://books.google.com/books?id=2rLBvrlKI7QC&pg=PA333 ''Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture''], [[Routledge]], p. 333.</ref>{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|pp=43–44, 89–95}} Most non-Han Chinese people, such as the Manchus, Mongols and Tibetans, did not bind their feet. Some non-Han ethnic groups did. Foot binding was practised by the [[Hui people|Hui Muslims]] in [[Gansu]] Province.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eEwTAAAAYAAJ&q=dungan+foot+binding&pg=PA893|title=Encyclopædia of religion and ethics |volume=8 |first1=James |last1=Hastings |first2=John Alexander |last2=Selbie |first3=Louis Herbert |last3=Gray |year=1916|publisher=T. & T. Clark|location=Edinburgh|page= 893|isbn=9780567065094|access-date=January 1, 2011}} Original from Harvard University</ref> The [[Dungan people|Dungan Muslims]], descendants of Hui from northwestern China who fled to central Asia, were also practising foot binding up to 1948.<ref>{{cite book| author = Touraj Atabaki, Sanjyot Mehendale|author2=Sanjyot Mehendale| title = Central Asia and the Caucasus: transnationalism and diaspora| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=OWMyFWAZLCwC| access-date = January 1, 2011| year = 2005| publisher = Psychology Press| isbn = 978-0-415-33260-6| page = 31 }}</ref> In southern China, in Canton ([[Guangzhou]]), 19th-century Scottish scholar [[James Legge]] noted a mosque that had a placard denouncing foot binding, saying Islam did not allow it since it constituted violating the creation of God.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/religionsofchina00legg|quote=mohammedan.|title=The religions of China: Confucianism and Tâoism described and compared with Christianity|author=James Legge|year=1880|publisher=Hodder and Stoughton|location=London|page=[https://archive.org/details/religionsofchina00legg/page/111 111]|access-date=June 28, 2010}} (Original from Harvard University)</ref><!-- Implying that they bound their feet? -->


=== Process ===
=== Process ===

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The process was started before the arch of the foot had a chance to develop fully, usually between the ages of 4 and 9. Binding usually started during the winter months since the feet were more likely to be numb, and therefore the pain would not be as extreme.<ref name="slippers">{{cite book|last=Jackson|first=Beverley|title=Splendid Slippers: A Thousand Years of an Erotic Tradition |publisher=Ten Speed Press|year=1997|isbn=978-0-89815-957-8}}</ref>
The process was started before the arch of the foot had a chance to develop fully, usually between the ages of four and nine. Binding usually started during the winter months since the feet were more likely to be numb and the pain would not be as extreme.<ref name="slippers">{{cite book |last=Jackson |first=Beverley |title=Splendid Slippers: A Thousand Years of an Erotic Tradition |publisher=Ten Speed Press |year=1997 |isbn=978-0-89815-957-8}}</ref>


First, each foot would be soaked in a warm mixture of herbs and animal blood; this was intended to soften the foot and aid the binding. Then, the toenails were cut back as far as possible to prevent in-growth and subsequent infections, since the toes were to be pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. Cotton bandages, 3&nbsp;m long and 5&nbsp;cm wide (10&nbsp;ft by 2 in), were prepared by soaking them in the blood and herb mixture. To enable the size of the feet to be reduced, the toes on each foot were curled under, then pressed with great force downwards and squeezed into the sole of the foot until the toes broke.
First, each foot would be soaked in a warm mixture of herbs and animal blood. This was intended to soften the foot and aid the binding. Then the toenails were cut back as far as possible to prevent in-growth and subsequent infections, since the toes were to be pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. Cotton bandages, {{convert|3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} long and {{convert|5|cm|in|frac=2|abbr=on}} wide, were prepared by soaking them in the blood and herb mixture. To enable the size of the feet to be reduced, the toes on each foot were curled under, then pressed with great force downwards and squeezed into the sole of the foot until the toes broke.<ref name=mackie />

The bandages were repeatedly wound in a figure-eight movement, starting at the inside of the foot at the instep, then carried over the toes, under the foot and around the heel, the broken toes being pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. The foot was drawn down straight with the leg and the arch of the foot forcibly broken. At each pass around the foot, the binding cloth was tightened, pulling the ball of the foot and the heel together, causing the broken foot to fold at the arch, pressing the toes beneath the sole. The binding was pulled so tightly that the girl could not move her toes at all and the ends of the binding cloth were then sewn so that the girl could not loosen it.


The broken toes were held tightly against the sole of the foot while the foot was then drawn down straight with the leg and the arch of the foot was forcibly broken. The bandages were repeatedly wound in a figure-eight movement, starting at the inside of the foot at the instep, then carried over the toes, under the foot, and around the heel, the freshly broken toes being pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. At each pass around the foot, the binding cloth was tightened, pulling the ball of the foot and the heel together, causing the broken foot to fold at the arch, and pressing the toes underneath the sole. The binding was pulled so tightly that the girl could not move her toes at all and the ends of the binding cloth were then sewn so that the girl could not loosen it.
[[File:Bound feet (X-ray).jpg|thumb|An X-ray of two bound feet]]
[[File:Bound feet (X-ray).jpg|thumb|An X-ray of two bound feet]]
[[File:FootBindingRxSchema2.gif|thumb|Schema of an x-ray comparison between an unbound and bound foot]]
[[File:FootBindingRxSchema2.gif|thumb|Schema of an X-ray comparison between an unbound and bound foot]]
The girl's broken feet required a great deal of care and attention and they would be unbound regularly. Each time the feet were unbound they were washed, the toes checked for injury, and the nails trimmed. When unbound, the broken feet were also kneaded to soften them and the soles of the girl's feet were often beaten to make the joints and broken bones more flexible. The feet were also soaked in a concoction that caused necrotic flesh to fall off.<ref name=Levy />


Immediately after this procedure, the girl's broken toes were folded back under and the feet were rebound. The bindings were pulled even tighter each time the girl's feet were rebound. This unbinding and rebinding ritual was repeated as often as possible (for the rich at least once daily, for poor peasants two or three times a week), with fresh bindings. It was generally an elder female member of the girl's family or a professional footbinder who carried out the initial breaking and ongoing binding of the feet. It was considered preferable to have someone other than the mother do it, as she might have been sympathetic to her daughter's pain and less willing to keep the bindings tight.<ref name=slippers />
The girl's broken feet required a great deal of care and attention, and they would be unbound regularly. Each time the feet were unbound, they were washed, the toes carefully checked for injury, and the nails carefully and meticulously trimmed. When unbound, the broken feet were also kneaded to soften them and the soles of the girl's feet were often beaten to make the joints and broken bones more flexible. The feet were also soaked in a concoction that caused any necrotic flesh to fall off.<ref name=Levy />


Once a girl's foot had been crushed and bound, attempting to reverse the process by unbinding was painful,<ref name=body>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s0122BsqrZwC&pg=PA117 |title= Encyclopedia of Body Adornment|author= Margo DeMello |pages=116–117 |publisher=Greenwood Press |year= 2007 |isbn=978-0-313-33695-9}}</ref> and the shape could not be reversed without a woman undergoing the same pain again. The timing and degree of foot binding varied among communities.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|pp=78–83}}
Immediately after this procedure, the girl's broken toes were folded back under and the feet were rebound. The bindings were pulled even tighter each time the girl's feet were rebound. This unbinding and rebinding ritual was repeated as often as possible (for the rich at least once daily, for poor peasants two or three times a week), with fresh bindings. It was generally an elder female member of the girl's family or a professional foot binder who carried out the initial breaking and ongoing binding of the feet. It was considered preferable to have someone other than the mother do it, as she might have been sympathetic to her daughter's pain and less willing to keep the bindings tight.<ref name=slippers />


=== Health problems ===
For most the bound feet eventually became numb. However, once a foot had been crushed and bound, attempting to reverse the process by unbinding was painful,<ref name=body>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s0122BsqrZwC&pg=PA117#v=onepage&q&f=false |title= Encyclopedia of Body Adornment|author= Margo DeMello |pages=116–117 |publisher=Greenwood Press |year= 2007 |isbn=978-0-313-33695-9}}</ref> and the shape could not be reversed without a woman undergoing the same pain all over again.
[[File:Feet of a Chinese woman, showing the effect of foot-binding.jpg|alt=feet of a Chinese woman in an isolation hospital in Mauritius|thumb|Feet of a Chinese woman, showing the effect of foot-binding]]
The most common problem with bound feet was [[infection]]. Despite the amount of care taken in regularly trimming the toenails, they would often in-grow, becoming infected and causing injuries to the toes. Sometimes, for this reason, the girl's toenails would be peeled back and removed altogether. The tightness of the binding meant that the circulation in the feet was faulty, and the circulation to the toes was almost cut off, so injuries to the toes were unlikely to heal and were likely to gradually worsen and lead to infected toes and rotting flesh. The necrosis of the flesh would initially give off a foul odour. Later the smell may have come from various microorganisms that colonized the folds.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/mar/21/china.gender |title= The ties that bind |first=Fraser|last= Newham|date= 21 March 2005 |work=The Guardian }}</ref> Most of the women receiving treatment did not go out often and were disabled.<ref name=mackie />


If the infection in the feet and toes entered the bones, it could cause them to soften, which could result in toes dropping off. This was seen as a benefit because the feet could then be bound even more tightly. Girls whose toes were more fleshy would sometimes have shards of glass or pieces of broken tiles inserted within the binding next to her feet and between her toes to cause injury and introduce infection deliberately.<ref>https://www.qmul.ac.uk/pathologymuseum/specimens/items/items/te230-bound-foot-of-a-chinese-woman-1862.html</ref> Disease inevitably followed infection, meaning that death from [[septic shock]] could result from foot binding, and a surviving girl was more at risk of medical problems as she grew older. It is thought that as many as 10% of girls may have died from [[gangrene]] and other infections owing to foot binding.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA423 |title=Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide |first= Mary White |last=Stewart |page=423 |publisher= Praeger|date=27 January 2014 |isbn=978-1-4408-2937-6}}</ref>
=== Health issues ===
The most common problem with bound feet was infection. Despite the amount of care taken in regularly trimming the toenails, they would often in-grow, becoming infected and causing injuries to the toes. Sometimes, for this reason, the girl's toenails would be peeled back and removed altogether. The tightness of the binding meant that the circulation in the feet was faulty, and the circulation to the toes was almost cut off, so any injuries to the toes were unlikely to heal and were likely to gradually worsen and lead to infected toes and rotting flesh. The necrosis of the flesh would also initially give off a foul odor, and later the smell may come from various microorganisms that colonized the folds.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/mar/21/china.gender |title= The ties that bind |first=Fraser|last= Newham|date= 21 March 2005 |work=The Guardian }}</ref>


At the beginning of the binding, many of the foot bones would remain broken, often for years. However as the girl grew older the bones would begin to heal. Even after the foot bones had healed, they were prone to rebreaking repeatedly, especially when the girl was in her teenage years and her feet were still soft. Bones in the girls' feet would often be deliberately broken again to further change the size or shape of the feet. This was especially the case with the girl's toes, which were broken several times since small toes were especially desirable.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cummings |first1=S. R. |last2=Ling |first2=X. |last3=Stone |first3=K. |title=Consequences of foot binding among older women in Beijing, China |journal=American Journal of Public Health |date=1997 |volume=87 |issue=10 |pages=1677–1679|doi=10.2105/AJPH.87.10.1677 |pmid=9357353 |pmc=1381134 }}</ref> Older women were more likely to break hips and other bones in falls, since they could not balance properly on their feet, and were less able to rise to their feet from a sitting position.<ref>Cummings, S. & Stone, K. (1997) "Consequences of Foot Binding Among Older Women in Beijing China", in: ''American Journal of Public Health'' EBSCO Host. October 1997</ref> Other issues that may have arisen from foot binding included paralysis and [[muscular atrophy]].<ref name=body /> By the turn of the century foot binding had been exposed in photographs, X-rays and detailed textual descriptions. These scientific investigations detailed how foot binding deformed the leg, covered the skin with cracks and sores and altered the posture.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018}}
If the infection in the feet and toes entered the bones, it could cause them to soften, which could result in toes dropping off; however, this was seen as a benefit because the feet could then be bound even more tightly. Girls whose toes were more fleshy would sometimes have shards of glass or pieces of broken tiles inserted within the binding next to her feet and between her toes to cause injury and introduce infection deliberately. Disease inevitably followed infection, meaning that death from septic shock could result from foot-binding, and a surviving girl was more at risk for medical problems as she grew older. It is thought that as many as 10% of girls may have died from gangrene and other infections due to footbinding.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA423#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=
Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide|author= Mary White Stewart |page=423 |publisher= Praeger|date=27 January 2014 |isbn=978-1-4408-2937-6}}</ref>

At the beginning of the binding, many of the foot bones would remain broken, often for years. However, as the girl grew older, the bones would begin to heal. Even after the foot bones had healed, they were prone to re-breaking repeatedly, especially when the girl was in her teenage years and her feet were still soft. Bones in the girls' feet would often be deliberately broken again in order to further change the size or shape of the feet. This was especially the case with the toes, as small toes were especially desirable.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cummings |first1=S.R. |last2=Ling |first2=X |last3=Stone |first3=K |title=Consequences of foot binding among older women in Beijing, China |journal=American journal of public health |date=1997 |volume=87(10) |pages=1677-1679.}}</ref> Older women were more likely to break hips and other bones in falls, since they could not balance securely on their feet, and were less able to rise to their feet from a sitting position.<ref>Cummings, S. & Stone, K. (1997) "Consequences of Foot Binding Among Older Women in Beijing China", in: ''American Journal of Public Health'' EBSCO Host. Oct 1997</ref> Other issues that might arise from foot binding included paralysis and [[muscular atrophy]].<ref name=body />


== Views and interpretations ==
== Views and interpretations ==
There are many interpretations to the practice of foot binding. The interpretive models used include fashion (with the Chinese customs somewhat comparable to the more extreme examples of Western women's fashion such as [[corset]]ry), seclusion (sometimes evaluated as morally superior to the gender mingling in the West), [[perversion]] (the practice imposed by men with sexual perversions), inexplicable deformation, child abuse and extreme cultural traditionalism. In the late 20th&nbsp;century some feminists introduced positive overtones, reporting that it gave some women a sense of mastery over their bodies and pride in their beauty.<ref name="Patricia Buckley Ebrey 1890, pp 1-34">Patricia Buckley Ebrey, "Gender and Sinology: Shifting Western Interpretations of Foot binding, 1300-1890", ''Late Imperial China'' (1999) 20#2 pp 1-34.</ref>


===Beauty and erotic appeal===
===Beauty and erotic appeal===
[[File:Woman with bound feet reclining on chaise lounge, China LCCN2001705601.jpg|thumb|240px|left|Bound feet were considered by some to be highly appealing]]
[[File:Woman with bound feet reclining on chaise lounge, China LCCN2001705601.jpg|thumb|240px|left|Bound feet were considered beautiful and even erotic.]]
Before footbinding was practised in China, admiration for small feet already existed as demonstrated by the [[Tang dynasty]] tale of [[Ye Xian]] written around 850 by [[Duan Chengshi]]. This tale of a girl who lost her shoe and then married a king who sought the owner of the shoe as only her foot was small enough to fit the shoe contains elements of the European story of [[Cinderella]], and is thought to be one of its antecedents.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jruLAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA77#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Footbinding: A Jungian Engagement with Chinese Culture and Psychology |author= Shirley See Yan Ma |pages=75&ndash;78 |publisher=Taylor & Francis Ltd |date=4 December 2009 |isbn=9781135190071 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://journal.oraltradition.org/files/articles/25ii/10_25.2.pdf |title=Asian Origins of Cinderella: The Zhuang Storyteller of Guangxi |journal=Oral Tradition|volume=25|number=2 |first=Fay |last=Beauchamp |pages=447–496 }}</ref> For many, the bound feet were an enhancement to a woman's beauty and made her movement more dainty,<ref>{{cite book|last=Ebrey|first=Patricia Buckley|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vr81YoYK0c4C&pg=PA160 |title='Cambridge Illustrated History of China|year=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=New York|pages=160–161|edition=2nd|isbn=9780521124331}}</ref> and a woman with perfect lotus feet was likely to make a more prestigious marriage. The desirability varies with the size of the feet &ndash; the perfect bound feet and the most desirable (called "golden lotuses") would be around 3 Chinese inches (around 4 inches (10&nbsp;cm) in Western measurement) or smaller, while those larger may be called "silver lotuses" (4 Chinese inches) or "iron lotuses" (5 Chinese inches or larger and the least desirable for marriage).<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZbJ3DgAAQBAJ&pg=PA59 |title=The Aesthetics of Dress |first= Ian |last=King |page=59 |isbn=9783319543222 |publisher=Springer|date=31 March 2017}}</ref> The belief that footbinding made women more desirable to men is widely used as an explanation for the spread and persistence of footbinding.<ref name="hill 1">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jEK2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PA56#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|author= Hill Gates |page=56 |publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}</ref>
Before foot binding was practised in China, admiration for small feet already existed as demonstrated by the [[Tang dynasty]] tale of [[Ye Xian]] written around 850 by [[Duan Chengshi]]. This tale of a girl who lost her shoe and then married a king who sought the owner of the shoe as only her foot was small enough to fit the shoe contains elements of the European story of [[Cinderella]] and is thought to be one of its antecedents.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jruLAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA77 |title=Footbinding: A Jungian Engagement with Chinese Culture and Psychology |author= Shirley See Yan Ma |pages=75&ndash;78 |publisher=Taylor & Francis Ltd |date=4 December 2009 |isbn=9781135190071 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://journal.oraltradition.org/files/articles/25ii/10_25.2.pdf |title=Asian Origins of Cinderella: The Zhuang Storyteller of Guangxi |journal=Oral Tradition |volume=25 |number=2 |first=Fay |last=Beauchamp |pages=447–496 |access-date=2017-07-25 |archive-date=2017-12-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171215135835/http://journal.oraltradition.org/files/articles/25ii/10_25.2.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> For many, the bound feet were an enhancement to a woman's beauty and made her movement more dainty,<ref>{{cite book|last=Ebrey|first=Patricia Buckley|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vr81YoYK0c4C&pg=PA160 |title='Cambridge Illustrated History of China|year=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=New York|pages=160–161|edition=2nd|isbn=9780521124331}}</ref> and a woman with perfect lotus feet was likely to make a more prestigious marriage.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=47}}{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=45}} Even while not much was written on the subject of foot binding prior to the latter half of the 19th&nbsp;century, the writings that were done on this topic, particularly by educated men, frequently alluded to the erotic nature and appeal of bound feet in their poetry.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=45}} The desirability varies with the size of the feet—the perfect bound feet and the most desirable (called {{gloss|golden lotuses}}) would be around 3 Chinese inches (around {{cvt|4|in|cm|order=flip|sigfig=1|disp=or}}) or smaller, while those larger were called {{gloss|silver lotuses}} (4 Chinese inches—around {{cvt|13|cm|in|sigfig=2|disp=or}}) or {{gloss|iron lotuses}} (5 Chinese inches—around {{cvt|17|cm|in|sigfig=2|disp=or}}—or larger, and thus the least desirable for marriage).<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZbJ3DgAAQBAJ&pg=PA59 |title=The Aesthetics of Dress |first= Ian |last=King |page=59 |isbn=9783319543222 |publisher=Springer|date=31 March 2017}}</ref> Therefore people had greater expectations for foot binding brides.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Brown|first1=Melissa J.|last2=Feldman|first2=Marcus W.|last3=Ehrlich|first3=Paul R.|date=2009|title=Sociocultural Epistasis and Cultural Exaptation in Footbinding, Marriage Form, and Religious Practices in Early 20th-Century Taiwan|url= |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=106|issue=52|pages=22139–22144|doi=10.1073/pnas.0907520106|jstor=40536412|pmid=20080786|issn=0027-8424|pmc=2796906|bibcode=2009PNAS..10622139B|doi-access=free}}</ref> The belief that foot binding made women more desirable to men is widely used as an explanation for the spread and persistence of foot binding.{{sfn|Gates|2014|p=56}}


Some also considered bound feet to be intensely erotic, and Qing Dynasty sex manuals listed 48 different ways of playing with women's bound feet. Some men preferred never to see a woman's bound feet, so they were always concealed within tiny "lotus shoes" and wrappings. According to [[Robert van Gulik]], the bound feet were also considered the most intimate part of a woman's body; in erotic art of the Qing to Song periods where the genitalia may be shown, the bound feet were never depicted uncovered.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=85M3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA218#v=onepage&q&f=false |title= Sexual life in ancient China:A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from Ca. 1500 B.C. Till 1644 A.D |page=218|author=Robert Hans van Gulik |year=1961 |publisher= Brill |isbn= 9004039171 }}</ref> Howard Levy however suggests that the barely revealed bound foot may also only function as an initial tease.<ref name="hill 1"/>
Some also considered bound feet to be intensely erotic. Some men preferred never to see a woman's bound feet, so they were always concealed within tiny 'lotus shoes' and wrappings. According to [[Robert van Gulik]], the bound feet were also considered the most intimate part of a woman's body. In [[erotic art]] of the Qing period where the genitalia may be shown, the bound feet were never depicted uncovered.{{sfn|van Gulik|1961|pp=218}} Howard Levy, however, suggests that the barely revealed bound foot may also only function as an initial tease.{{sfn|Gates|2014|p=56}}


An erotic effect of the bound feet was the lotus gait, the tiny steps and swaying walk of a woman whose feet had been bound. Women with such deformed feet avoided placing weight on the front of the foot and tended to walk predominantly on their heels. As a result, women who had undergone foot-binding would walk in a cautious and unsteady manner.<ref name=slippers /> Some men found the smell of the bound feet attractive, and some also apparently believed that bound feet would cause layers of folds to develop in the vagina, and that the thighs would become sensuously heavier and the vagina tighter.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xmdKklZM9-kC&pg=PA117#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Bodies under Siege: Self-mutilation, Nonsuicidal Self-injury, and Body Modification in Culture and Psychiatry|author= Armando R. Favazza | page=117|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press|edition= third |date=2 May 2011|isbn=9781421401119 }}</ref> The psychoanalyst [[Sigmund Freud]] considered footbinding to be a "perversion that corresponds to [[foot fetishism]]".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hacker|first1=Authur|title=China Illustrated|date=2012|publisher=Turtle Publishing|isbn=9781462906901|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O5JyAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT252}}</ref>
An effect of the bound feet was the lotus gait, the tiny steps and swaying walk of a woman whose feet had been bound. Women with such deformed feet avoided placing weight on the front of the foot and tended to walk predominantly on their heels.<ref name=slippers /> Walking on bound feet necessitated bending the knees slightly and swaying to maintain proper movement and balance, a dainty walk that was also considered to be erotically attractive to some men.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity |author=Janell L. Carroll |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9X8EAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA8 |page=8 |publisher=Cengage Learning |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-495-60499-0 }}</ref> Some men found the smell of the bound feet attractive and some also apparently believed that bound feet would cause layers of folds to develop in the vagina, and that the thighs would become sensuously heavier and the vagina tighter.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xmdKklZM9-kC&pg=PA117 |title=Bodies under Siege: Self-mutilation, Nonsuicidal Self-injury, and Body Modification in Culture and Psychiatry|author= Armando R. Favazza | page=117|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press|edition= third |date=2 May 2011|isbn=9781421401119 }}</ref> The psychoanalyst [[Sigmund Freud]] considered foot binding to be a "perversion that corresponds to [[foot fetishism]]",<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hacker|first1=Authur|title=China Illustrated|date=2012|publisher=Turtle Publishing|isbn=9781462906901|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O5JyAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT252}}</ref> and that it appeased male [[castration anxiety]].<ref name=mackie />


===Role of Confucianism===
===Role of Confucianism===
[[File:A HIGH CASTE LADYS DAINTY LILY FEET.jpg|thumb|220px|A woman with her feet unwrapped]]
[[File:A HIGH CASTE LADYS DAINTY LILY FEET.jpg|thumb|220px|A woman with her feet unwrapped]]


A common argument is that the revival of [[Confucianism]] as [[Neo-Confucianism]] during the Song dynasty resulted in the decline of the status of women, and that in addition to promoting the seclusion of women and the [[cult of widow chastity]], it also contributed to the development of footbinding.<ref name="ebrey 2"/> According to [[Robert van Gulik]], the prominent Song Confucian scholar [[Zhu Xi]] stressed the inferiority of women as well as the need to keep men and women strictly separate.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/?id=4Ibp1RTW0AoC&pg=PA46#v=onepage&q&f=false |title= Chinese Outcasts: Discrimination and Emancipation in Late Imperial China|author= Anders Hansson|page=46 |publisher=Brill |year= 1996 |isbn= 978-9004105966 }}</ref> It was claimed by [[Lin Yutang]] among others, probably based on an oral tradition, that [[Zhu Xi]] also promoted footbinding in [[Fujian]] as a way of encouraging chastity among women, that by restricting their movement it would help keep men and women separate.<ref name="ebrey 2">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GDPskRXfl5cC&pg=PA10&lpg=PA10#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Women and the Family in Chinese History|author= Patricia Buckley Ebrey |pages=10&ndash;12|publisher=Routledge |date=19 September 2002 |isbn= 978-0415288224}}</ref> However, historian [[Patricia Buckley Ebrey|Patricia Ebrey]] suggests that this story might be fictitious.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA139|title= Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation |author= Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee |date= April 2006|isbn= 978-0-7914-6749-7 |page=139 }}</ref>
During the [[Song dynasty]], the status of women declined.<ref name=mackie /> A common argument is that it was the result of the revival of [[Confucianism]] as [[neo-Confucianism]] and that, in addition to promoting the seclusion of women and the [[cult of widow chastity]], it also contributed to the development of foot binding.<ref name="ebrey 2"/> According to [[Robert van Gulik]], the prominent Song Confucian scholar [[Zhu Xi]] stressed the inferiority of women as well as the need to keep men and women strictly separate.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Ibp1RTW0AoC&pg=PA46 |title= Chinese Outcasts: Discrimination and Emancipation in Late Imperial China|author= Anders Hansson|page=46 |publisher=Brill |year= 1996 |isbn= 978-9004105966 }}</ref> It was claimed by [[Lin Yutang]] among others, probably based on an oral tradition, that Zhu Xi also promoted foot binding in [[Fujian]] as a way of encouraging chastity among women; that by restricting their movement, it would help keep men and women separate.<ref name="ebrey 2">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GDPskRXfl5cC&pg=PA10 |title=Women and the Family in Chinese History|author= Patricia Buckley Ebrey |pages=10&ndash;12|publisher=Routledge |date=19 September 2002 |isbn= 978-0415288224}}</ref> However, historian [[Patricia Buckley Ebrey|Patricia Ebrey]] suggests that this story might be fictitious,<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA139|title= Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation |author= Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee |date= April 2006|isbn= 978-0-7914-6749-7 |page=139 |publisher= State University of New York Press }}</ref> and argued that the practice arose so as to emphasize the gender distinction during a period of societal change in the Song dynasty.<ref name=mackie /><ref>{{cite journal |title=Why Chinese Neo-Confucian Women Made a Fetish of Small Feet|first=Aubrey L. |last=McMahan|journal=Grand Valley Journal of History|volume= 2|issue= 1 Article 3 |citeseerx=10.1.1.648.2278}}</ref>


Some Confucian moralists in fact disapproved of the erotic associations of footbinding, and unbound women were also praised.<ref name="Smith2008">{{cite book|author=Bonnie G. Smith|title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History: 4 Volume Set|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EFI7tr9XK6EC&pg=PA358|year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press, USA|isbn=978-0-19-514890-9|pages=358–}}</ref> The Neo-Confucian [[Cheng Yi (philosopher)|Cheng Yi]] was said to be against footbinding and his family and descendants did not bind their feet.<ref>{{cite book|author=丁传靖 编|title=《宋人轶事汇编》|location=北京|publisher=中华书局|date=1981|page=卷9,第2册,页455}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/foot-binding-and-ruism-confucianism_us_58c86e8fe4b01d0d473bceed |title=Foot-binding and Ruism (Confucianism)|date=16 March 2017 |author= Bin Song|work=Huffington Post }}</ref> Modern Confucian scholars such as [[Tu Weiming]] also dispute any causal link between neo-Confucianism and footbinding.<ref>{{cite book |title=Confucian thought: selfhood as creative transformation|author= Tu Wei-ming|publisher= State University of New York Press|date= 1985 }}</ref> It has been noted that Confucian doctrine in fact prohibits mutilation of the body as people should not "injure even the hair and skin of the body received from mother and father". It is however argued that such injunction applies less to women, rather it is meant to emphasize the sacred link between sons and their parents. Furthermore, it is argued that Confucianism institutionalized the family system in which women are called upon to sacrifice themselves for the good of the family, a system that fostered such practice.<ref name="blake"/>
Some Confucian moralists in fact disapproved of the erotic associations of foot binding, and unbound women were also praised.<ref name="Smith2008">{{cite book|author=Bonnie G. Smith|title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History: 4 Volume Set|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EFI7tr9XK6EC&pg=PA358|year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press, USA|isbn=978-0-19-514890-9|pages=358–}}</ref> The Neo-Confucian [[Cheng Yi (philosopher)|Cheng Yi]] was said to be against foot binding and his family and descendants did not bind their feet.<ref>{{cite book|author=丁传靖 编|title=《宋人轶事汇编》|location=北京|publisher=中华书局|date=1981|page=卷9,第2册,页455}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/foot-binding-and-ruism-confucianism_us_58c86e8fe4b01d0d473bceed |title=Foot-binding and Ruism (Confucianism)|date=16 March 2017 |author= Bin Song|work=Huffington Post }}</ref> Modern Confucian scholars such as [[Tu Weiming]] also dispute any causal link between neo-Confucianism and foot binding,<ref>{{cite book |title=Confucian thought: selfhood as creative transformation|author= Tu Wei-ming|publisher= State University of New York Press|date= 1985 }}</ref> as Confucian doctrine prohibits mutilation of the body as people should not "injure even the hair and skin of the body received from mother and father". It is argued that such injunction applies less to women, rather it is meant to emphasize the sacred link between sons and their parents. Furthermore, it is argued that Confucianism institutionalized the family system in which women are called upon to sacrifice themselves for the good of the family, a system that fostered such practice.<ref name="blake"/>


Historian [[Dorothy Y. Ko|Dorothy Ko]] proposed that footbinding may be an expression of the Confucian ideals of civility and culture in the form of correct attire or bodily adornment, and that footbinding was seen as a necessary part of being feminine as well as being civilized. Footbinding was often classified in Chinese encyclopedia as clothing or a form of bodily embellishment rather than mutilation; one from 1591 for example placed footbinding in a section on "Female Adornments" that included hairdos, powders, and ear-piercings. According to Ko, the perception of footbinding as a civilised practice may be evinced from a [[Ming dynasty]] account that mentioned a proposal to "entice [the barbarians] to civilize their customs" by encouraging footbinding among their womenfolk.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://womenshistory.osu.edu/sites/womenshistory.osu.edu/files/The%20Body%20as%20Attire.pdf |title=The Body as Attire: The Shifting Meanings of Footbinding in Seventeenth-Century China |journal=Journal of Women's History|volume =8|number= 4 |date= 1997 |pages= 8–27 |doi= 10.1353/jowh.2010.0171 |first=Dorothy|last= Ko}}</ref> The practice was also carried out only by women on girls, and it served to emphasize the distinction between male and female, an emphasis that began from an early age.<ref name="steele"/><ref name="Ko1994">{{cite book|author=Dorothy Ko|title=Teachers of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth-century China|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0nNcRiE-TKsC&pg=PA149|year=1994|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=978-0-8047-2359-6|pages=149–}}</ref> Anthropologist Fred Blake argued that the practice of footbinding was a form of discipline undertaken by women themselves, and perpetuated by women on their daughters, so as to inform their daughters of their role and position in society, and to support and participate in the neo-Confucian way of being civilized.<ref name="blake">{{cite journal |url=http://anthropology.hawaii.edu/People/Faculty/Blake/pdfs/1994%20%20Foot-binding%20in%20Neo-Confucian%20China.pdf|title=Foot-Binding in Neo-Confucian China and the Appropriation of Female Labor | author=C. Fred Blake|journal= Signs |volume= 19|number= 3|date= 1994|pages= 676–712 |doi=10.1086/494917}}</ref>
Historian [[Dorothy Y. Ko|Dorothy Ko]] proposed that foot binding may be an expression of the Confucian ideals of civility and culture in the form of correct attire or bodily adornment, and that foot binding was seen as a necessary part of being feminine as well as being civilized. Foot binding was often classified in [[Chinese encyclopedia]] as clothing or a form of bodily embellishment rather than mutilation. One from 1591, for example, placed foot binding in a section on "Female Adornments" that included hairdos, powders, and ear piercings. According to Ko, the perception of foot binding as a civilized practice may be evinced from a [[Ming dynasty]] account that mentioned a proposal to "entice [the barbarians] to civilize their customs" by encouraging foot binding among their womenfolk.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://womenshistory.osu.edu/sites/womenshistory.osu.edu/files/The%20Body%20as%20Attire.pdf |title=The Body as Attire: The Shifting Meanings of Footbinding in Seventeenth-Century China |journal=Journal of Women's History|volume =8|number= 4 |date= 1997 |pages= 8–27 |doi= 10.1353/jowh.2010.0171 |first=Dorothy|last= Ko|s2cid=145191396 }}</ref> The practice was carried out only by women on girls, and it served to emphasize the distinction between male and female, an emphasis that began from an early age.<ref name="steele"/><ref name="Ko1994">{{cite book|author=Dorothy Ko|title=Teachers of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth-century China|url=https://archive.org/details/teachersofinnerc00kodo|url-access=registration|year=1994|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=978-0-8047-2359-6|pages=[https://archive.org/details/teachersofinnerc00kodo/page/149 149]–}}</ref> Anthropologist Fred Blake argued that the practice of foot binding was a form of discipline undertaken by women themselves, and perpetuated by women on their daughters, so as to inform their daughters of their role and position in society, and to support and participate in the neo-Confucian way of being civilized.<ref name="blake">{{cite journal|url= http://anthropology.hawaii.edu/People/Faculty/Blake/pdfs/1994%20%20Foot-binding%20in%20Neo-Confucian%20China.pdf|title= Foot-Binding in Neo-Confucian China and the Appropriation of Female Labor|author= C. Fred Blake|journal= Signs|volume= 19|number= 3|date= 1994|pages= 676–712|doi= 10.1086/494917|s2cid= 40841025|access-date= 2016-10-29|archive-date= 2018-10-25|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20181025003227/http://anthropology.hawaii.edu/People/Faculty/Blake/pdfs/1994%20%20Foot-binding%20in%20Neo-Confucian%20China.pdf|url-status= dead}}</ref>


===Feminist perspective===
===Feminist perspective===
{{Violence against women|sp=uk}}
{{Violence against women|sp=uk}}
Foot binding is often seen by feminists as an oppressive practice against women who were victims of a sexist culture.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA139#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation |authors=Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee |page=139 | isbn=9780791481790|publisher= SUNY Press }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rophdLUYIjcC&pg=PT246#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Footbinding, Feminism and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Fan Hong|isbn=9781136303142 |publisher=Routledge}}</ref> It is also widely seen as a form of violence against women.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA423 |title=Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide|edition= 2nd|author= Mary White Stewart |pages=423–437 |publisher=Praeger|date=27 January 2014|isbn= 9781440829383}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOKAMXEA_jQC&pg=PA310 |title=Encyclopedia of Interpersonal Violence, Volume 1 |editors= Claire M. Renzetti, Jeffrey L. Edleson |page=276&ndash;277 |publisher= SAGE Publications|date=6 August 2008|isbn= 978-1412918008}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kNh3G6Pqdr0C&pg=PA6 |title=Gender Violence: Interdisciplinary Perspectives|editors= Laura L. O'Toole, Jessica R. Schiffman |publisher=New York University Press |date=1 March 1997|isbn= 978-0814780411 |page=6 }}</ref> Bound feet rendered women dependent on their families, particularly their men, as they became largely restricted to their homes.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fairbank|first=John King|title=The Great Chinese Revolution, 1800–1985|year=1986|publisher=Harper & Row|location=New York|page=70}}</ref> The early Chinese feminist [[Qiu Jin]], who underwent the painful process of unbinding her own bound feet, attacked footbinding and other traditional practices. She argued that women, by retaining their small bound feet, made themselves subservient as it would mean women imprisoning themselves indoors. She believed that women should emancipate themselves from oppression, that girls can ensure their independence through education, and that they should develop new mental and physical qualities fitting for the new era.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_cLd_h5Hh00C&pg=PA93#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Footbinding, Feminism, and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Hong Fan |publisher= Routledge |pages= 90–96|date=1 June 1997|isbn= 978-0714646336}}</ref><ref name="qiu jin"/> The ending of the practice is seen as a significant event in the process of female emancipation in China.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_cLd_h5Hh00C&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Footbinding, Feminism, and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Hong Fan |publisher= Routledge |date=1 June 1997|isbn= 978-0714646336 |page=1}}</ref>
Foot binding is considered an oppressive practice against women who were victims of a sexist culture.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yTvLQbaH81wC&pg=PA139 |title=Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation |author=Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee |page=139 | isbn=9780791481790|publisher= SUNY Press |date=February 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rophdLUYIjcC&pg=PT246 |title=Footbinding, Feminism and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Fan Hong|isbn=9781136303142 |publisher=Routledge|date=2013-04-03}}</ref> It is also widely seen as a form of violence against women.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ac2UAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA423 |title=Ordinary Violence: Everyday Assaults against Women Worldwide|edition= 2nd|author= Mary White Stewart |pages=423–437 |publisher=Praeger|date=27 January 2014|isbn= 9781440829383}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOKAMXEA_jQC&pg=PA310 |title=Encyclopedia of Interpersonal Violence |volume=1 |editor= Claire M. Renzetti |editor2=Jeffrey L. Edleson |page=276&ndash;277 |publisher= SAGE Publications|date=6 August 2008|isbn= 978-1412918008}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kNh3G6Pqdr0C&pg=PA6 |title=Gender Violence: Interdisciplinary Perspectives|editor= Laura L. O'Toole |editor2=Jessica R. Schiffman |publisher=New York University Press |date=1 March 1997|isbn= 978-0814780411 |page=6 }}</ref> Bound feet rendered women dependent on their families, particularly the men, as they became largely restricted to their homes.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fairbank|first=John King|title=The Great Chinese Revolution, 1800–1985|url=https://archive.org/details/greatchineserevo00fair|url-access=registration|year=1986|publisher=Harper & Row|location=New York|page=[https://archive.org/details/greatchineserevo00fair/page/70 70]|isbn=9780060390570}}</ref> Thus, the practice ensured that women were much more reliant on their husbands.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Le|first=Huy Anh S.|date=2014|title=Revisiting Footbinding: The Evolution of the Body as Method in Modern Chinese History|url=http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/927/revisiting-footbinding-the-evolution-of-the-body-as-method-in-modern-chinese-history|journal=Inquiries Journal|language=en|volume=6|issue=10}}</ref> The early Chinese feminist [[Qiu Jin]], who underwent the painful process of unbinding her own bound feet, attacked foot binding and other traditional practices. She argued that women, by retaining their small bound feet, made themselves subservient by imprisoning themselves indoors. She believed that women should emancipate themselves from oppression, that girls could ensure their independence through education, and that they should develop new mental and physical qualities fitting for the new era.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_cLd_h5Hh00C&pg=PA93 |title=Footbinding, Feminism, and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Hong Fan |publisher= Routledge |pages= 90–96|date=1 June 1997|isbn= 978-0714646336}}</ref><ref name="qiu jin"/> The end of the practice of foot binding is seen as a significant event in the process of female emancipation in China,<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_cLd_h5Hh00C&pg=PA1 |title=Footbinding, Feminism, and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China|author= Hong Fan |publisher= Routledge |date=1 June 1997|isbn= 978-0714646336 |page=1}}</ref> and a major event in the history of [[Feminism in China|Chinese feminism]].{{citation needed|date=November 2024}}


In the late 20th&nbsp;century, some feminists have pushed back against the prevailing Western critiques of foot binding, arguing that the presumption that foot binding was done solely for the sexual pleasure of men denies the agency and cultural influence of women.<ref>Dorothy Ko, "Rethinking sex, female agency, and footbinding", ''Research on Women in Modern Chinese History / Jindai Zhongguo Funu Shi Yanjiu'' (1999), Vol. 7, pp 75–105</ref>{{sfn|Hershatter|2018|p=66}}
===Other interpretations===


===Other interpretations===
Some scholars such as Laurel Bossen and Hill Gates reject the theories that bound feet in China were considered more beautiful, or that it was a means of male control over women, a sign of class status, or a chance for women to marry well. They argued that foot binding was important in work, and can be seen as a way by mothers to tie their daughters down, train them in handwork and keep them close at hand.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2011/12/unraveling-a-brutal-custom/ |title=Unraveling a brutal custom |author=Colleen Walsh |work=Harvard Gazette |date=December 9, 2011 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|author= Hill Gates |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jEK2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PA22#v=onepage&q&f=false |publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}</ref>
Some scholars such as Laurel Bossen and Hill Gates reject the notion that bound feet in China were considered more beautiful, or that it was a means of male control over women, a sign of class status, or a chance for women to marry well (in general, bound women did not improve their class position by marriage). Foot binding is believed to have spread from elite women to civilian women and there were large differences in each region. The body and labor of unmarried daughters belonged to their parents, thereby the boundaries between work and kinship for women were blurred.<ref name="fujian">{{Cite journal |last=Gates |first=Hill |date=2001 |title=Footloose in Fujian: Economic Correlates of Footbinding |journal=[[Comparative Studies in Society and History]] |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=130–148 |doi=10.1017/S0010417501003619 |doi-broken-date=2024-11-13 |jstor=2696625 |pmid=18193574 |s2cid=11299781 |issn=0010-4175 }}</ref> They argued that foot binding was an instrumental means to reserve women to handwork, and can be seen as a way by mothers to tie their daughters down, train them in handwork, and keep them close at hand.<ref name=walsh>{{cite web |url= http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2011/12/unraveling-a-brutal-custom/ |title=Unraveling a brutal custom |author=Colleen Walsh |work=[[Harvard Gazette]] |date=December 9, 2011 }}</ref>{{sfn|Gates|2014}} This argument has been challenged by John Shepherd in his book ''Footbinding as Fashion'', and shows there was no connection between handicraft industries and the proportion of women bound in Hebei.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|pp=113–143}}


Foot binding was common when women could do [[light industry]], but where women were required to do heavy farm work they often did not bind their feet because it hindered physical work. These scholars argued that the coming of the mechanized industry at the end of the 19th&nbsp;century and the beginning of the 20th&nbsp;century, such as the introduction of industrial textile processes, resulted in a loss of light handwork for women, removing a reason to maintain the practice. Mechanization resulted in women who worked at home facing a crisis.<ref name="bossen brown gates" /> Coupled with changes in politics and people's consciousness, the practice of foot binding disappeared in China forever after two generations.<ref name="fujian"/><ref name=walsh /> More specifically, the 1842 [[Treaty of Nanking|Treaty of Nanjing]] (after the [[First Opium War]]) opened five cities as [[treaty ports]] where foreigners could live and trade. This led to foreign citizens residing in the area, where many proselytized as Christian missionaries. These foreigners condemned many long-standing Chinese cultural practices like foot binding as "uncivilized" — marking the beginning of the end for the centuries-long practice.{{sfn|Hershatter|2018}}
It has also been argued that while the practice started out as a fashion, it persisted because it became an expression of Han identity after the Mongols invaded China in 1279, and later the Manchus' conquest in 1644, as it was then practised only by Han women.<ref name="steele">{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA40 |pages=40–41 |title=China Chic: East Meets West|author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=Yale University Press |year= 2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9 }}</ref> During the Qing Dynasty, attempts were made by the Manchus to ban the practice but failed, and it has been argued the attempts at banning may have in fact led to a spread of the practice among Han Chinese in the 17th and 18th centuries.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UIaIP0jyBPAC&pg=PA266#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding|author= Dorothy Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year= 2008 |page=266 |isbn=978-0-520-25390-2 }}</ref>


It has been argued that while the practice started out as a fashion, it persisted because it became an expression of Han identity after the [[Mongol conquest of China|Mongols invaded China]] in 1279, and later the [[Manchu conquest|Manchus' conquest]] in 1644, as it was then practised only by Han women.{{clarify|Wasn't it also practised by Hui Muslims?|date=November 2024}}<ref name="steele">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lw1_yKwk_XkC&pg=PA40 |pages=40–41 |title=China Chic: East Meets West |author1=Valerie Steele |author2=John S. Major |publisher=[[Yale University Press]] |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-300-07931-9 }}</ref> During the Qing dynasty, attempts were made by the Manchus to ban the practice but failed, and it has been argued the attempts at banning may have in fact led to a spread of the practice among Han Chinese in the 17th and 18th&nbsp;centuries.{{sfn|Ko|2005|p=266}} John Shepherd provides a critical review of the evidence cited for the notion that foot binding was an expression of "Han identity" and rejects this interpretation.{{sfn|Shepherd|2018|pp=23–31}}
== In literature, film and television ==
{{refimprove section|date=October 2017}}
<!-- This is not a place to list every novel that mentions footbinding, or a film or TV shows that happens to have a character with bound feet. -->


==In popular culture==
The bound foot has played a prominent part in many media works, both Chinese and non-Chinese, modern and traditional. These depictions are sometimes based on observation or research and sometimes on rumors or supposition. Sometimes, as in the case of [[Pearl Buck]]'s ''[[The Good Earth]]'' (1931), the accounts are relatively neutral, implying a respect for Chinese culture and assuming that it is not the role of outsiders to promote reform. Sometimes the accounts seem intended to rouse like-minded Chinese and foreign opinion to abolish the custom, and sometimes the accounts imply [[wikt:condescension|condescension]] or [[wikt:contempt|contempt]] for China.<ref>Patricia Ebrey, "Gender and Sinology: Shifting Western Interpretations of Footbinding, 1300–1890", ''Late Imperial China'' 20.2 (1999): 1-34.</ref>
{{more citations needed section|date=April 2022}}
The bound foot has played a prominent part in many media works, both Chinese and non-Chinese, modern and traditional.<ref>Mei Ching Liu, "Women and the Media in China: An Historical Perspective", ''Journalism Quarterly'' 62 (1985): 45-52.</ref> These depictions are sometimes based on observation or research and sometimes on rumors or supposition. Sometimes, as in the case of [[Pearl Buck]]'s ''[[The Good Earth]]'' (1931), the accounts are relatively neutral or empirical, implying respect for Chinese culture.{{efn|Though ''The Good Earth'' features neutral or empirical accounts of foot binding, Buck's previous novel, ''East Wind: West Wind'' explored the unbinding of a woman's feet, experienced as frightening and painful yet finally empowering, as part of her transition into a new, more modern and more individualistic persona under her doctor husband's tutelage.}} Sometimes, the accounts seem intended to rouse like-minded Chinese and foreign opinion to abolish the custom, and sometimes the accounts imply condescension or contempt for China.<ref>Patricia Ebrey, "Gender and Sinology: Shifting Western Interpretations of Footbinding, 1300–1890", ''Late Imperial China'' 20.2 (1999): 1-34.</ref>


* ''[[Flowers in the Mirror]]'' (1837) by Ju-Chen Li includes chapters set in the "Country of Women", where men bear children and have bound feet.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/?id=XHhR-6OGubIC |title =Flowers in the Mirror|author=Ruzhen Li |others=translation by [[Lin Tai-yi]] |publisher=University of California Press |year=1965 |isbn=978-0-520-00747-5}}</ref>
* Quoted in the ''[[Jin Ping Mei]]'' ({{circa|1610}}): "displaying her exquisite feet, three inches long and no wider than a thumb, very pointed and with high insteps."<ref>{{cite book |title=The Golden Lotus, Volume 1 |date=1979 |publisher=Graham Brash (PTE) Ltd |location=Singapore |page=101}}</ref>
* [[Anna Bunina]] mentions the custom in her 1810 fable "{{lang|ru|[[:wikisource:ru:Пекинское ристалище (Бунина)|Пекинское ристалище]]}}" (''The Peking Stadium''), which describes a Chinese woman attempting to run a race and barely finishing the boys' course, yet still getting applause for the effort. Bunina used the custom as an allegory to her own difficulties in getting recognition as a poet.<ref>{{cite book | doi=10.11647/obp.0018 | doi-access=free | title=Women in Nineteenth-Century Russia: Lives and Culture | date=2012 | isbn=978-1-906924-65-2 | editor-last1=Rosslyn | editor-last2=Tosi | editor-first1=Wendy | editor-first2=Alessandra }}</ref>
* ''The Three-Inch Golden Lotus'' (1994) by [[Feng Jicai]]<ref>{{cite book|title=The Three Inch Lotus|authors=Jicai, Feng & Wakefield, David (Translator)|location=Honolulu|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|date=1994}}</ref> presents a satirical picture of the movement to abolish the practice, which is seen as part of Chinese culture.
* ''[[Flowers in the Mirror]]'' (1837) by Ju-Chen Li includes chapters set in the "Country of Women", where men bear children and have bound feet.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/flowersinmirror00liju |url-access=registration |title =Flowers in the Mirror|author=Ruzhen Li |others=translation by [[Lin Tai-yi]] |publisher=University of California Press |year=1965 |isbn=978-0-520-00747-5}}</ref>
* In the film ''[[The Inn of the Sixth Happiness]]'' (1958), [[Ingrid Bergman]] portrays British missionary to China [[Gladys Aylward]] who is assigned as a foreigner the task by a local Mandarin to unbind the feet of young women, an unpopular order that the civil government had failed to fulfill. Later, the children are able to escape troops by walking miles to safety.
* ''The Three-Inch Golden Lotus'' (1994) by [[Feng Jicai]]<ref>{{cite book|title=The Three Inch Lotus|url=https://archive.org/details/unset0000unse_k2k7|url-access=registration|author=Jicai, Feng |translator=Wakefield, David |location=Honolulu|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|date=1994|isbn=9780585250052}}</ref> presents a satirical picture of the movement to abolish the practice, which is seen as part of Chinese culture.
* Ruthanne Lum McCunn wrote a [[biographical novel]] ''[[A Thousand Pieces of Gold]]'' (1981, adapted into [[Thousand Pieces of Gold (film)|a 1991 film]]), about [[Polly Bemis]], a [[Chinese American]] [[American pioneer|pioneer]] woman. It describes her feet being bound, and later unbound, when she needed to help her family with farm labour.
* In the film ''[[The Inn of the Sixth Happiness]]'' (1958), [[Ingrid Bergman]] portrays a British missionary to China [[Gladys Aylward]], who is assigned as a foreigner the task by a local Mandarin to unbind the feet of young women, an unpopular order that the civil government had failed to fulfil. Later, the children are able to escape troops by walking miles to safety.
* [[Emily Prager]]'s short story "A Visit from the Footbinder", from her collection of short stories of the same name (1982), describes the last few hours of a young Chinese girl's childhood before the professional footbinder arrives to initiate her into the adult woman's life of beauty and pain.
* Ruthanne Lum McCunn wrote a [[biographical novel]], ''[[Thousand Pieces of Gold]]'' (1981, adapted into [[Thousand Pieces of Gold (film)|a 1991 film]]), about [[Polly Bemis]], a [[Chinese American]] [[American pioneer|pioneer]] woman. It describes her feet being bound and later unbound when she needed to help her family with farm labor.
* [[Lisa Loomer]]'s play ''The Waiting Room'' (1994) deals with themes of [[body modification]]. One of the three main characters is an 18th-century Chinese woman who arrives in a modern hospital waiting room seeking medical help for complications resulting from her bound feet.
* [[Emily Prager]]'s short story "A Visit from the Footbinder", from her collection of short stories of the same name (1982), describes the last few hours of a young Chinese girl's childhood before the professional footbinder arrives to initiate her into the adult woman's life of beauty and pain.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Newman |first=Judie |date=2007-06-01 |title=The Readerly Politics of Western Domination : Emily Prager's "A Visit from the Footbinder" |url=https://journals.openedition.org/jsse/777 |journal=Journal of the Short Story in English. Les Cahiers de la nouvelle |language=en |issue=48 |eissn=1969-6108}}</ref>
* [[Lensey Namioka]]'s novel ''[[Ties that Bind, Ties that Break]]'' (1999) follows a girl named Ailin in China who refuses to have her feet bound, which comes to affect her future.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-385-32666-7 | title=Children's Book Review: Ties That Bind, Ties That Break by Lensey Namioka | work=[[Publishers Weekly]] | accessdate=April 23, 2018}}</ref>
* [[Jung Chang]]'s family autobiography ''[[Wild Swans]]'' presents the story of Yu-fang, the grandmother, who had bound feet from the age of two.
* [[Lisa Loomer]]'s play ''The Waiting Room'' (1994) deals with themes of [[body modification]]. One of the three main characters is an 18th-century Chinese woman who arrives in a modern hospital waiting room, seeking medical help for complications resulting from her bound feet. She describes the foot-binding process, as well as the physical and psychological harm her bound feet have caused.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gecgil |first=Emine |title=New Women's Writing: Contextualising Fiction, Poetry and Philosophy |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |year=2018 |isbn=978-1-5275-0814-9 |editor-last=Bhattacharjee |editor-first=Subashish |pages=191–205 |editor-last2=Narayan Ray |editor-first2=Girindra}}</ref>
* [[Lensey Namioka]]'s novel ''[[Ties that Bind, Ties that Break]]'' (1999) follows a girl named Ailin in China who refuses to have her feet bound, which comes to affect her future.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-385-32666-7 | title=Children's Book Review: Ties That Bind, Ties That Break by Lensey Namioka | work=[[Publishers Weekly]] | date=May 1999 | access-date=April 23, 2018}}</ref>
* [[Lisa See]]'s novel ''[[Snow Flower and the Secret Fan]]'' (2005) is about two Chinese girls who are destined to be friends. The novel is based upon the sacrifices women make to be married and includes the two girls being forced into getting their feet bound. The book was adapted into [[Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (film)|a 2011 film]] directed by [[Wayne Wang]].
* [[Lisa See]]'s novel ''[[Snow Flower and the Secret Fan]]'' (2005) is about two Chinese girls who are destined to be friends. The novel is based upon the sacrifices women make to be married and includes the two girls being forced into getting their feet bound. The book was adapted into [[Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (film)|a 2011 film]] directed by [[Wayne Wang]].
* ''[[Feng Shui (2004 film)|Feng Shui]]'' and sequel ''[[Feng Shui 2]]'' features a ghost of a foot-bound woman inhabits a [[bagua]] and cursed those who holds the item.
* The Filipino horror film ''[[Feng Shui (2004 film)|Feng Shui]]'' and its sequel ''[[Feng Shui 2]]'' feature a ghost of a foot-bound woman inhabits a [[bagua]] and cursed those who holds the item.
* Sieglinde Sullivan from ''[[Black Butler]]'' had her feet bound when she was young as part of the "Emerald Witch" hoax invented by the German military.
* [[Lisa See]]'s novel ''[[China Dolls (novel)|China Dolls]]'' (2014) describes Chinese family traditions including foot binding.
* [[Xiran Jay Zhao]]'s novel ''[[Iron Widow]]'' (2021) is set in a futuristic world inspired by medieval China that still practices foot binding. The main character, Wu Zetian, had her feet bound in childhood and suffers from chronic pain due to it.
* [[Edward Rutherfurd]]'s novel ''[[China (novel)|China]]'': An Epic Novel, is set in late [[Qing dynasty|Qing Dynasty China]], when foot binding was still common practice among [[Han Chinese]] in the north. Bright Moon, the daughter of a main character Mei-Ling, has her feet bound to increase her chances of a good marriage, and the practice is described in detail. The character soon resents that she has her feet bound, as it causes her severe pain, and stops her from participating in many activities.
* In episode 9 of the anime series ''[[The Apothecary Diaries]]'', a servant girl was found dead in a moat. After an autopsy, it was found that she had her feet bound.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Artificial cranial deformation]]
* [[Artificial cranial deformation]]
* [[Attraction to disability]]
* [[Body modification]]
* [[Body modification]]
* [[Corset]]
* [[Corset controversy]]
* [[Cosmetic surgery]]
* [[Foot Emancipation Society]]
* [[Foot Emancipation Society]]
* [[Foot fetishism]]
* [[Hobble skirt]]
* [[High-heeled footwear]]
* [[Signalling theory]]
* [[Women in ancient and imperial China]]
* [[Women in ancient and imperial China]]


== References ==
== Notes ==
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{notelist}}


=== Notes ===
== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}
* {{PD-old-text|title=Encyclopædia of religion and ethics, Volume 8|year=1916|author=James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray}}
* {{PD-old-text|title=The religions of China: Confucianism and Tâoism described and compared with Christianity|year=1880|author=James Legge}}


== Further reading ==
==References and further reading ==
* Berg, Eugene E., MD, "Chinese Footbinding". ''Radiology Review – Orthopaedic Nursing'' 24, no. 5 (September/October) 66–67
{{Commons+cat|Bound feet|Foot binding}}
* Berger, Elizabeth, Liping Yang, and Wa Ye. [https://www.academia.edu/78928942/Foot_binding_in_a_Ming_dynasty_cemetery_near_Xian_China?sm=b "Foot binding in a Ming dynasty cemetery near Xi'an, China"]. ''International journal of paleopathology'' 24 (2019): 79–88.
* Eugene E.Berg, MD, ''Chinese Footbinding''. Radiology Review – Orthopaedic Nursing 24, no. 5 (September/October) 66–67
* Bossen, Laurel, and Hill Gates. ''Bound feet, young hands: tracking the demise of footbinding in village China'' (Stanford University Press, 2017).
* Brown, Melissa J., and Damian Satterthwaite-Phillips. "Economic correlates of footbinding: Implications for the importance of Chinese daughters' labor". ''PLOS ONE'' 13.9 (2018): e0201337. [https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0201337 online]
* {{Cite journal|author1-link=Melissa J. Brown|last1=Brown|first1=Melissa J.|last2=Bossen|first2=Laurel|last3=Gates|first3=Hill|last4=Satterthwaite-Phillips|first4=Damian|date=2012|title=Marriage Mobility and Footbinding in Pre-1949 Rural China: A Reconsideration of Gender, Economics, and Meaning in Social Causation|journal=The Journal of Asian Studies|volume=71|issue=4|pages=1035–1067|doi=10.1017/S0021911812001271|jstor=23357433|issn=0021-9118|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite journal |last=Brown |first = Melissa J. |title =Footbinding in Economic Context: Rethinking the Problems of Affect and the Prurient Gaze |journal =Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies |volume =80 |issue = 1 |pages =179–214 |date =2020 |doi = 10.1353/jas.2020.0007 |s2cid = 235848627|access-date = }} Review article.
* Cassel, Susie Lan (2007). {{"'}}...the Binding Altered Not only My Feet but My Whole Character': Footbinding and First-World Feminism in Chinese American Literature". ''Journal of Asian American Studies''. Vol. 10 (1): 31–58. Project Muse and Ethnic Newswatch.
* Fan Hong (1997) ''Footbinding, Feminism and Freedom''. London: Frank Cass
* Fan Hong (1997) ''Footbinding, Feminism and Freedom''. London: Frank Cass
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jEK2BQAAQBAJ |title=Footbinding and Women's Labor in Sichuan|first=Hill|last=Gates|publisher=Routledge |year= 2014 |isbn=978-0-415-52592-3 }}
* Ko, Dorothy (2005) ''Cinderella’s Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding''. Los Angeles: University of California Press.
*{{cite book |last=Hershatter |first=Gail |author-link=Gail Hershatter |date=2018 |title=Women and China's Revolutions |url=https://public.ebookcentral.proquest.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=5492087 |location=Ebookcentral |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |isbn=9781442215702}}
* {{cite journal |archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20111203205602/http://www.asianetwork.org/exchange/2008-spring/anex2008-spring-ko.pdf |archivedate=3 December 2011|first= Dorothy|last= Ko |title=Perspectives on Foot-binding |journal= ASIANetwork Exchange|volume= XV|number= 3 |year= 2008 |url=http://www.asianetwork.org/exchange/2008-spring/anex2008-spring-ko.pdf}}
* Hughes, Roxane. [https://serval.unil.ch/resource/serval:BIB_26A1A427958F.P001/REF.pdf ''Ambivalent Orientalism: Footbinding in Chinese American History, Culture and Literature'']. Diss. Université de Lausanne, Faculté des lettres, 2017.
*{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qpNQ91M3BswC&pg=PA34 |title=Every Step a Lotus: Shoes for Bound Feet|first=Dorothy|last=Ko |publisher=University of California Press |year=2002 |isbn=978-0-520-23284-6}}
* {{cite book | isbn=978-0-520-94140-3 | title=Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding | last1=Ko | first1=Dorothy | date=12 December 2005 | publisher=University of California Press }}
* {{cite journal |archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20111203205602/http://www.asianetwork.org/exchange/2008-spring/anex2008-spring-ko.pdf |archive-date=3 December 2011|first= Dorothy|last= Ko |title=Perspectives on Foot-binding |journal= ASIANetwork Exchange|volume= XV|number= 3 |year= 2008 |url=http://www.asianetwork.org/exchange/2008-spring/anex2008-spring-ko.pdf}}
* {{cite book|last=Levy|first=Howard S.|title=The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Tradition of Foot Binding in China|year=1991|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=New York}}
* {{cite book|last=Levy|first=Howard S.|title=The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Tradition of Foot Binding in China|year=1991|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=New York}}
* [[Wang Ping (author)|Ping, Wang]]. ''Aching for Beauty: Footbinding in China''. New York: Anchor Books, 2002.
* [[Wang Ping (author)|Ping, Wang]]. ''Aching for Beauty: Footbinding in China''. New York: Anchor Books, 2002.
* Shepherd, John R. "The Qing, the Manchus, and Footbinding: Sources and Assumptions Under Scrutiny." ''Frontiers of History in China'' 11.2 (2016): 279–322.
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=85M3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PR7&lpg=PR#v=onepage&q&f=false |title= Sexual life in ancient China:A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from Ca. 1500 B.C. Till 1644 A.D |author=Robert Hans van Gulik |year=1961 |publisher= Brill |isbn= 9004039171 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Shepherd |first1=John R. |title=Footbinding as Fashion |date=2018 |publisher=University of Washington Press |location=Seattle |isbn=9780295744407}}
* [http://asiaobscura.com/2011/08/the-sick-collector-and-his-1000-pairs-of-shoes.html Collection of bound foot shoes] Article on Yang Shaorong, collector of bound foot shoes. Includes images of peasant/winter models and western-style models.
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=85M3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PR7 |title= Sexual life in ancient China: A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from Ca. 1500 B.C. Till 1644 A.D |last=van Gulik |first=Robert Hans|year=1961 |publisher= Brill |isbn= 9004039171 }}
* The Virtual Museum of The City of San Francisco, ''[http://www.sfmuseum.org/chin/foot.html Chinese Foot Binding – Lotus Shoes]''
* The Virtual Museum of The City of San Francisco, "[http://www.sfmuseum.org/chin/foot.html Chinese Foot Binding – Lotus Shoes]"


; Attributution
* {{PD-old-text|title=Encyclopædia of religion and ethics, Volume 8|year=1916|author=James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray}}
* {{PD-old-text|title=The religions of China: Confucianism and Tâoism described and compared with Christianity|year=1880|author=James Legge}}

== External links ==
* {{Commons and category inline|Category:Foot binding}}

{{Sexuality and gender in China}}
{{Violence against women/end}}
{{Violence against women/end}}
{{Sex fetish}}
{{Sex fetish}}
Line 196: Line 220:
{{Portal bar|China|Fashion}}
{{Portal bar|China|Fashion}}


[[Category:Foot binding| ]]
[[Category:Body modification]]
[[Category:Body modification]]
[[Category:Gender studies]]
[[Category:History of women in China]]
[[Category:Chinese women]]
[[Category:Controversies in China]]
[[Category:Foot]]
[[Category:Foot]]
[[Category:Foot fetishism]]
[[Category:Foot fetishism]]
[[Category:Violence against women in China]]
[[Category:Mutilation]]
[[Category:Mutilation]]
[[Category:Violence against women in China]]

Latest revision as of 19:26, 1 December 2024

Foot binding
An albumen silver print photograph of a young woman with bound feet; she sits on a chair facing left, her feet - one with a lotus shoe, the other bare - propped up on a stool.
A Chinese woman showing her foot, image by Lai Afong, c. 1870s
Traditional Chinese纏足
Simplified Chinese缠足
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinchánzú
Wade–Gilesch'an2-tsu2
IPA[ʈʂʰǎn.tsǔ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationchìhn-jūk
Jyutpingcin4-zuk1
IPA[tsʰin˩.tsʊk̚˥]
Alternative (Min) Chinese name
Traditional Chinese裹腳
Simplified Chinese裹脚
Transcriptions

Foot binding (simplified Chinese: 缠足; traditional Chinese: 纏足; pinyin: chánzú), or footbinding, was the Chinese custom of breaking and tightly binding the feet of young girls to change their shape and size. Feet altered by foot binding were known as lotus feet and the shoes made for them were known as lotus shoes. In late imperial China, bound feet were considered a status symbol and a mark of feminine beauty. However, foot binding was a painful practice that limited the mobility of women and resulted in lifelong disabilities.

The prevalence and practice of foot binding varied over time and by region and social class.[1] The practice may have originated among court dancers during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period in 10th-century China and gradually became popular among the elite during the Song dynasty, later spreading to lower social classes by the Qing dynasty (1644–1912). Manchu emperors attempted to ban the practice in the 17th century but failed.[2] In some areas, foot binding raised marriage prospects. It has been estimated that by the 19th century 40–50% of all Chinese women may have had bound feet, rising to almost 100% among upper-class Han Chinese women.[3]

While Christian missionaries and Chinese reformers challenged the practice in the late 19th century, it was not until the early 20th century that the practice began to die out, following the efforts of anti-foot binding campaigns. Additionally, upper-class and urban women dropped the practice sooner than poorer rural women.[4] By 2007, only a handful of elderly Chinese women whose feet had been bound were still alive.[5]

History

[edit]

Origin

[edit]
A black and white stylised illustration of a seated woman, one foot resting on top of her left thigh, wrapping and binding her right foot.
18th-century illustration showing Yao Niang binding her own feet

There are a number of stories about the origin of foot binding before its establishment during the Song dynasty. One of these accounts is of Pan Yunu, a favourite consort of the Southern Qi Emperor Xiao Baojuan. In the story, Pan Yunu, renowned for having delicate feet, performed a dance barefoot on a floor decorated with the design of a golden lotus. The Emperor, expressing admiration, said that "lotus springs from her every step!" (bù bù shēng lián 歩歩生蓮), a reference to the Buddhist legend of Padmavati, under whose feet lotus springs forth. This story may have given rise to the terms 'golden lotus' or 'lotus feet' used to describe bound feet; there is no evidence, however, that Consort Pan ever bound her feet.[6]

The general view is that the practice is likely to have originated during the reign of the 10th-century Emperor Li Yu of the Southern Tang, just before the Song dynasty.[2] Li Yu created a 1.8-meter-tall (6 ft) golden lotus decorated with precious stones and pearls and asked his concubine Yao Niang (窅娘) to bind her feet in white silk into the shape of the crescent moon. She then performed a dance on the points of her bound feet on the lotus.[2] Yao Niang's dance was said to be so graceful that others sought to imitate her.[7] The binding of feet was then replicated by other upper-class women and the practice spread.[8]

Some of the earliest possible references to foot binding appear around 1100, when a couple of poems seemed to allude to the practice.[9][10][11][12] Soon after 1148,[12] in the earliest extant discourse on the practice of foot binding, scholar Zhang Bangji [zh] wrote that a bound foot should be arch shaped and small.[13][14] He observed that "women's foot binding began in recent times; it was not mentioned in any books from previous eras."[12] In the 13th century, scholar Che Ruoshui [zh] wrote the first known criticism of the practice: "Little girls not yet four or five years old, who have done nothing wrong, nevertheless are made to suffer unlimited pain to bind [their feet] small. I do not know what use this is."[12][15][16]

The earliest archeological evidence for foot binding dates to the tombs of Huang Sheng, who died in 1243 at the age of 17, and Madame Zhou, who died in 1274. Each woman's remains showed feet bound with gauze strips measuring 1.8 m (6 ft) in length. Zhou's skeleton, particularly well preserved, showed that her feet fit into the narrow, pointed slippers that were buried with her.[12] The style of bound feet found in Song dynasty tombs, where the big toe was bent upwards, appears to be different from the norm of later eras—an ideal known as the 'three-inch golden lotus'—may be a later development in the 16th century.[17][18]

Later eras

[edit]
Small bound feet were once considered beautiful while large unbound feet were judged as crude.

At the end of the Song dynasty, men would drink from a special shoe, the heel of which contained a small cup. During the Yuan dynasty some would also drink directly from the shoe itself. This practice was called 'toast to the golden lotus' and lasted until the late Qing dynasty.[19]

The first European to mention foot binding was the Italian missionary Odoric of Pordenone in the 14th century, during the Yuan dynasty.[20] However no other foreign visitors to Yuan China mentioned the practice, including Ibn Battuta and Marco Polo (who nevertheless noted the dainty walk of Chinese women, who took very small steps), perhaps an indication that it was not a widespread or extreme practice at that time.[21] The practice was encouraged by Mongol rulers for their Chinese subjects.[8] The practice became increasingly common among the gentry families, later spreading to the general populace, as commoners and theatre actors alike adopted foot binding. By the Ming period the practice was no longer the preserve of the gentry and had instead come to be considered a status symbol.[22][23][24] As foot binding restricted the movement of a woman, one side effect of its rising popularity was the corresponding decline of the art of women's dance in China, and it became increasingly rare to hear about beauties and courtesans who were also great dancers after the Song era.[25][26]

A lotus shoe for bound feet, Louise Weiss collection, Saverne

The Manchus issued a number of edicts to ban the practice, first in 1636 when the Manchu leader Hong Taiji declared the founding of the new Qing dynasty, then in 1638, and another in 1664 by the Kangxi Emperor.[22] Few Han Chinese complied with the edicts, and Kangxi eventually abandoned the effort in 1668. By the 19th century, it was estimated that 40–50% of Chinese women had bound feet. Among upper class Han Chinese women, the figure was almost 100%.[5] Bound feet became a mark of beauty and were also a prerequisite for finding a husband. They also became an avenue for poorer women to marry up in some areas, such as Sichuan.[27] In late 19th century Guangdong it was customary to bind the feet of the eldest daughter of a lower-class family who was intended to be brought up as a lady. Her younger sisters would grow up to be bond-servants or domestic slaves and be able to work in the fields, but the eldest daughter would be assumed never to have the need to work. Women, their families and their husbands took great pride in tiny feet, with the ideal length, called the 'Golden Lotus', being about three Chinese inches () long—around 11 cm (4.3 in).[28][29] This pride was reflected in the elegantly embroidered silk slippers and wrappings girls and women wore to cover their feet. Handmade shoes served to exhibit the embroidery skill of the wearer as well.[30] These shoes also served as support, as some women with bound feet might not have been able to walk without the support of their shoes and would have been severely limited in their mobility.[31] Contrary to missionary writings, many women with bound feet were able to walk and work in the fields, albeit with greater limitations than their non-bound counterparts.[32]

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, there were dancers with bound feet as well as circus performers who stood on prancing or running horses. Women with bound feet in one village in Yunnan Province formed a regional dance troupe to perform for tourists in the late 20th century, though age has since forced the group to retire.[33] In other areas, women in their 70s and 80s assisted in the rice fields (albeit in a limited capacity) even into the early 21st century.[5]

Decline

[edit]

Opposition to foot binding had been raised by some Chinese writers in the 18th century. In the mid-19th century, many of the leaders of the Taiping Rebellion were men of Hakka background whose women did not bind their feet, and they outlawed foot binding in areas under their control.[34][35] However the rebellion failed and Christian missionaries, who had provided education for girls and actively discouraged what they considered a barbaric practice that had deleterious social effect on women,[36] then played a part in changing elite opinion on foot binding through education, pamphleteering and lobbying of the Qing court,[37][38] as no other culture in the world practised the custom of foot binding.[39]

The earliest-known Western anti-foot binding society was formed in Amoy (Xiamen) in 1874. 60–70 Christian women in Xiamen attended a meeting presided over by a missionary, John MacGowan, and formed the Natural Foot Society (Tianzu Hui (天足会), literally Heavenly Foot Society).[40][41] MacGowan held the view that foot binding was a serious problem that called into doubt the whole of Chinese civilization; he felt that "the nefarious civilization interferes with Divine Nature."[42] Members of the Heavenly Foot Society vowed not to bind their daughters' feet.[39][36] In 1895, Christian women in Shanghai led by Alicia Little, also formed a Natural Foot Society.[41][43] It was also championed by the Woman's Christian Temperance Movement founded in 1883 and advocated by missionaries including Timothy Richard, who thought that Christianity could promote equality between the sexes.[44] This missionary-led opposition had stronger impacts than earlier Han or Manchu opposition.[45] Western missionaries established the first schools for girls, and encouraged women to end the practice of foot binding.[46] Christian missionaries did not conceal their shock and disgust either when explaining the process of foot binding to Western peers and their descriptions shocked their audience back home.[45]

Reform-minded Chinese intellectuals began to consider foot binding to be an aspect of their culture that needed to be eliminated.[47] In 1883, Kang Youwei founded the Anti-footbinding Society near Canton to combat the practice, and anti-foot binding societies appeared across the country, with membership for the movement claimed to reach 300,000.[48][49] The anti-foot binding movement stressed pragmatic and patriotic reasons rather than feminist ones, arguing that abolition of foot binding would lead to better health and more efficient labour. Kang Youwei submitted a petition to the throne commenting on the fact that China had become a joke to foreigners and that "footbinding was the primary object of such ridicule."[50]

Reformers such as Liang Qichao, influenced by Social Darwinism, also argued that it weakened the nation, since enfeebled women supposedly produced weak sons.[51] In his "On Women's Education", Liang Qichao asserts that the root cause of national weakness inevitably lies the lack of education for women. Qichao connected education for women and foot binding: "As long as foot binding remains in practice, women's education can never flourish."[52] Qichao was also disappointed that foreigners had opened the first schools as he thought that the Chinese should be teaching Chinese women.[50] At the turn of the 20th century, early feminists, such as Qiu Jin, called for the end of foot binding.[53][54] In 1906, Zhao Zhiqian wrote in Beijing Women's News to blame women with bound feet for being a national weakness in the eyes of other nations.[55] Many members of anti-foot binding groups pledged to not bind their daughters' feet nor to allow their sons to marry women with bound feet.[41][56] In 1902, Empress Dowager Cixi issued an anti-foot binding edict, but it was soon rescinded.[citation needed]

In 1912 the new Republic of China government banned foot binding, though the ban was not actively implemented,[57] and leading intellectuals of the May Fourth Movement saw foot binding as a major symbol of China's backwardness.[58] Provincial leaders, such as Yan Xishan in Shanxi, engaged in their own sustained campaign against foot binding with foot inspectors and fines for those who continued the practice,[57] while regional governments of the later Nanjing regime also enforced the ban.[37] The campaign against foot binding was successful in some regions. In one province, a 1929 survey showed that, while only 2.3% of girls born before 1910 had unbound feet, 95% of those born after were not bound.[59] In a region south of Beijing, Dingxian, where over 99% of women once had bound feet, no new cases were found among those born after 1919.[60][61] In Taiwan, the practice was also discouraged by the ruling Japanese from the beginning of Japanese rule, and from 1911 to 1915 it was gradually made illegal.[62] The practice lingered on in some regions in China. In 1928, a census in rural Shanxi found that 18% of women had bound feet,[33] while in some remote rural areas, such as Yunnan Province, it continued to be practiced until the 1950s.[63][64] In most parts of China the practice had virtually disappeared by 1949.[59] The practice was also stigmatized in Communist China, and the last vestiges of foot binding were stamped out, with the last new case of foot binding reported in 1957.[65][66] By the 21st century, only a few elderly women in China still had bound feet.[67][68] In 1999, the last shoe factory making lotus shoes, the Zhiqian Shoe Factory in Harbin, closed.[69][70][failed verification]

Practice

[edit]

Variations and prevalence

[edit]
A comparison between a woman with un-bound feet (left) and a woman with bound feet in 1902

Foot binding was practised in various forms and its prevalence varied in different regions.[71] A less severe form in Sichuan, called "cucumber foot" (huángguā jiǎo 黃瓜腳) due to its slender shape, folded the four toes under but did not distort the heel or taper the ankle.[33][72] Some working women in Jiangsu made a pretence of binding while keeping their feet natural.[37] Not all women were always bound—some women once bound remained bound throughout their lives, some were only briefly bound and some were bound until marriage.[73] Foot binding was most common among women whose work involved domestic crafts and those in urban areas;[37] it was also more common in northern China, where it was widely practised by women of all social classes, but less so in parts of southern China such as Guangdong and Guangxi, where it was largely a practice of women in the provincial capitals or among the gentry.[74][13] Feet were bound to their smallest in the northern provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Shanxi and Shaanxi, but the binding was less extreme and less common in the southern provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan and Guizhou, where not all daughters of the wealthy had bound feet.[75] Foot binding limited the mobility of girls, so they became engaged in handwork from childhood.[30] It is thought that the necessity for female labour in the fields owing to a longer growing season in the South and the impracticability of bound feet working in wet rice fields limited the spread of the practice in the countryside of the South.[76] However some farming women bound their daughter's feet, but "the process began later than in elite families, and feet were bound more loosely among the poor."[77]

The Manchu "flower bowl" shoes designed to imitate bound feet, mid-1880s

Manchu women, as well as Mongol and Chinese women in the Eight Banners, did not bind their feet. The most a Manchu woman might do was to wrap the feet tightly to give them a slender appearance.[78] The Manchus, wanting to emulate the particular gait that bound feet necessitated, adapted their own form of platform shoes to cause them to walk in a similar swaying manner. These Manchu platform shoes were known as "flower bowl" shoes (Chinese: 花盆鞋; pinyin: Huāpénxié) or "horse-hoof" shoes (Chinese: 馬蹄鞋; pinyin: Mǎtíxié); they have a platform generally made of wood 5–20 cm (2–6 in) in height and fitted to the middle of the sole, or they have a small central tapered pedestal. Many Han Chinese in the Inner City of Beijing did not bind their feet either, and it was reported in the mid-1800s that around 50–60% of non-banner women had unbound feet. Han immigrant women to the Northeast came under Manchu influence and abandoned foot binding.[79] Bound feet nevertheless became a significant differentiating marker between Han women and Manchu or other banner women.[78]

The Hakka people were unusual among Han Chinese in not practising foot binding.[80][81] Most non-Han Chinese people, such as the Manchus, Mongols and Tibetans, did not bind their feet. Some non-Han ethnic groups did. Foot binding was practised by the Hui Muslims in Gansu Province.[82] The Dungan Muslims, descendants of Hui from northwestern China who fled to central Asia, were also practising foot binding up to 1948.[83] In southern China, in Canton (Guangzhou), 19th-century Scottish scholar James Legge noted a mosque that had a placard denouncing foot binding, saying Islam did not allow it since it constituted violating the creation of God.[84]

Process

[edit]
A bound foot
A bound foot
A bandaged bound foot
A bandaged bound foot

The process was started before the arch of the foot had a chance to develop fully, usually between the ages of four and nine. Binding usually started during the winter months since the feet were more likely to be numb and the pain would not be as extreme.[85]

First, each foot would be soaked in a warm mixture of herbs and animal blood. This was intended to soften the foot and aid the binding. Then the toenails were cut back as far as possible to prevent in-growth and subsequent infections, since the toes were to be pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. Cotton bandages, 3 m (10 ft) long and 5 cm (2 in) wide, were prepared by soaking them in the blood and herb mixture. To enable the size of the feet to be reduced, the toes on each foot were curled under, then pressed with great force downwards and squeezed into the sole of the foot until the toes broke.[39]

The bandages were repeatedly wound in a figure-eight movement, starting at the inside of the foot at the instep, then carried over the toes, under the foot and around the heel, the broken toes being pressed tightly into the sole of the foot. The foot was drawn down straight with the leg and the arch of the foot forcibly broken. At each pass around the foot, the binding cloth was tightened, pulling the ball of the foot and the heel together, causing the broken foot to fold at the arch, pressing the toes beneath the sole. The binding was pulled so tightly that the girl could not move her toes at all and the ends of the binding cloth were then sewn so that the girl could not loosen it.

An X-ray of two bound feet
Schema of an X-ray comparison between an unbound and bound foot

The girl's broken feet required a great deal of care and attention and they would be unbound regularly. Each time the feet were unbound they were washed, the toes checked for injury, and the nails trimmed. When unbound, the broken feet were also kneaded to soften them and the soles of the girl's feet were often beaten to make the joints and broken bones more flexible. The feet were also soaked in a concoction that caused necrotic flesh to fall off.[47]

Immediately after this procedure, the girl's broken toes were folded back under and the feet were rebound. The bindings were pulled even tighter each time the girl's feet were rebound. This unbinding and rebinding ritual was repeated as often as possible (for the rich at least once daily, for poor peasants two or three times a week), with fresh bindings. It was generally an elder female member of the girl's family or a professional footbinder who carried out the initial breaking and ongoing binding of the feet. It was considered preferable to have someone other than the mother do it, as she might have been sympathetic to her daughter's pain and less willing to keep the bindings tight.[85]

Once a girl's foot had been crushed and bound, attempting to reverse the process by unbinding was painful,[86] and the shape could not be reversed without a woman undergoing the same pain again. The timing and degree of foot binding varied among communities.[87]

Health problems

[edit]
feet of a Chinese woman in an isolation hospital in Mauritius
Feet of a Chinese woman, showing the effect of foot-binding

The most common problem with bound feet was infection. Despite the amount of care taken in regularly trimming the toenails, they would often in-grow, becoming infected and causing injuries to the toes. Sometimes, for this reason, the girl's toenails would be peeled back and removed altogether. The tightness of the binding meant that the circulation in the feet was faulty, and the circulation to the toes was almost cut off, so injuries to the toes were unlikely to heal and were likely to gradually worsen and lead to infected toes and rotting flesh. The necrosis of the flesh would initially give off a foul odour. Later the smell may have come from various microorganisms that colonized the folds.[88] Most of the women receiving treatment did not go out often and were disabled.[39]

If the infection in the feet and toes entered the bones, it could cause them to soften, which could result in toes dropping off. This was seen as a benefit because the feet could then be bound even more tightly. Girls whose toes were more fleshy would sometimes have shards of glass or pieces of broken tiles inserted within the binding next to her feet and between her toes to cause injury and introduce infection deliberately.[89] Disease inevitably followed infection, meaning that death from septic shock could result from foot binding, and a surviving girl was more at risk of medical problems as she grew older. It is thought that as many as 10% of girls may have died from gangrene and other infections owing to foot binding.[90]

At the beginning of the binding, many of the foot bones would remain broken, often for years. However as the girl grew older the bones would begin to heal. Even after the foot bones had healed, they were prone to rebreaking repeatedly, especially when the girl was in her teenage years and her feet were still soft. Bones in the girls' feet would often be deliberately broken again to further change the size or shape of the feet. This was especially the case with the girl's toes, which were broken several times since small toes were especially desirable.[91] Older women were more likely to break hips and other bones in falls, since they could not balance properly on their feet, and were less able to rise to their feet from a sitting position.[92] Other issues that may have arisen from foot binding included paralysis and muscular atrophy.[86] By the turn of the century foot binding had been exposed in photographs, X-rays and detailed textual descriptions. These scientific investigations detailed how foot binding deformed the leg, covered the skin with cracks and sores and altered the posture.[93]

Views and interpretations

[edit]

There are many interpretations to the practice of foot binding. The interpretive models used include fashion (with the Chinese customs somewhat comparable to the more extreme examples of Western women's fashion such as corsetry), seclusion (sometimes evaluated as morally superior to the gender mingling in the West), perversion (the practice imposed by men with sexual perversions), inexplicable deformation, child abuse and extreme cultural traditionalism. In the late 20th century some feminists introduced positive overtones, reporting that it gave some women a sense of mastery over their bodies and pride in their beauty.[94]

Beauty and erotic appeal

[edit]
Bound feet were considered beautiful and even erotic.

Before foot binding was practised in China, admiration for small feet already existed as demonstrated by the Tang dynasty tale of Ye Xian written around 850 by Duan Chengshi. This tale of a girl who lost her shoe and then married a king who sought the owner of the shoe as only her foot was small enough to fit the shoe contains elements of the European story of Cinderella and is thought to be one of its antecedents.[95][96] For many, the bound feet were an enhancement to a woman's beauty and made her movement more dainty,[97] and a woman with perfect lotus feet was likely to make a more prestigious marriage.[98][99] Even while not much was written on the subject of foot binding prior to the latter half of the 19th century, the writings that were done on this topic, particularly by educated men, frequently alluded to the erotic nature and appeal of bound feet in their poetry.[99] The desirability varies with the size of the feet—the perfect bound feet and the most desirable (called 'golden lotuses') would be around 3 Chinese inches (around 10 cm or 4 in) or smaller, while those larger were called 'silver lotuses' (4 Chinese inches—around 13 cm or 5.1 in) or 'iron lotuses' (5 Chinese inches—around 17 cm or 6.7 in—or larger, and thus the least desirable for marriage).[100] Therefore people had greater expectations for foot binding brides.[101] The belief that foot binding made women more desirable to men is widely used as an explanation for the spread and persistence of foot binding.[102]

Some also considered bound feet to be intensely erotic. Some men preferred never to see a woman's bound feet, so they were always concealed within tiny 'lotus shoes' and wrappings. According to Robert van Gulik, the bound feet were also considered the most intimate part of a woman's body. In erotic art of the Qing period where the genitalia may be shown, the bound feet were never depicted uncovered.[103] Howard Levy, however, suggests that the barely revealed bound foot may also only function as an initial tease.[102]

An effect of the bound feet was the lotus gait, the tiny steps and swaying walk of a woman whose feet had been bound. Women with such deformed feet avoided placing weight on the front of the foot and tended to walk predominantly on their heels.[85] Walking on bound feet necessitated bending the knees slightly and swaying to maintain proper movement and balance, a dainty walk that was also considered to be erotically attractive to some men.[104] Some men found the smell of the bound feet attractive and some also apparently believed that bound feet would cause layers of folds to develop in the vagina, and that the thighs would become sensuously heavier and the vagina tighter.[105] The psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud considered foot binding to be a "perversion that corresponds to foot fetishism",[106] and that it appeased male castration anxiety.[39]

Role of Confucianism

[edit]
A woman with her feet unwrapped

During the Song dynasty, the status of women declined.[39] A common argument is that it was the result of the revival of Confucianism as neo-Confucianism and that, in addition to promoting the seclusion of women and the cult of widow chastity, it also contributed to the development of foot binding.[107] According to Robert van Gulik, the prominent Song Confucian scholar Zhu Xi stressed the inferiority of women as well as the need to keep men and women strictly separate.[108] It was claimed by Lin Yutang among others, probably based on an oral tradition, that Zhu Xi also promoted foot binding in Fujian as a way of encouraging chastity among women; that by restricting their movement, it would help keep men and women separate.[107] However, historian Patricia Ebrey suggests that this story might be fictitious,[109] and argued that the practice arose so as to emphasize the gender distinction during a period of societal change in the Song dynasty.[39][110]

Some Confucian moralists in fact disapproved of the erotic associations of foot binding, and unbound women were also praised.[111] The Neo-Confucian Cheng Yi was said to be against foot binding and his family and descendants did not bind their feet.[112][113] Modern Confucian scholars such as Tu Weiming also dispute any causal link between neo-Confucianism and foot binding,[114] as Confucian doctrine prohibits mutilation of the body as people should not "injure even the hair and skin of the body received from mother and father". It is argued that such injunction applies less to women, rather it is meant to emphasize the sacred link between sons and their parents. Furthermore, it is argued that Confucianism institutionalized the family system in which women are called upon to sacrifice themselves for the good of the family, a system that fostered such practice.[115]

Historian Dorothy Ko proposed that foot binding may be an expression of the Confucian ideals of civility and culture in the form of correct attire or bodily adornment, and that foot binding was seen as a necessary part of being feminine as well as being civilized. Foot binding was often classified in Chinese encyclopedia as clothing or a form of bodily embellishment rather than mutilation. One from 1591, for example, placed foot binding in a section on "Female Adornments" that included hairdos, powders, and ear piercings. According to Ko, the perception of foot binding as a civilized practice may be evinced from a Ming dynasty account that mentioned a proposal to "entice [the barbarians] to civilize their customs" by encouraging foot binding among their womenfolk.[116] The practice was carried out only by women on girls, and it served to emphasize the distinction between male and female, an emphasis that began from an early age.[117][118] Anthropologist Fred Blake argued that the practice of foot binding was a form of discipline undertaken by women themselves, and perpetuated by women on their daughters, so as to inform their daughters of their role and position in society, and to support and participate in the neo-Confucian way of being civilized.[115]

Feminist perspective

[edit]

Foot binding is considered an oppressive practice against women who were victims of a sexist culture.[119][120] It is also widely seen as a form of violence against women.[121][122][123] Bound feet rendered women dependent on their families, particularly the men, as they became largely restricted to their homes.[124] Thus, the practice ensured that women were much more reliant on their husbands.[125] The early Chinese feminist Qiu Jin, who underwent the painful process of unbinding her own bound feet, attacked foot binding and other traditional practices. She argued that women, by retaining their small bound feet, made themselves subservient by imprisoning themselves indoors. She believed that women should emancipate themselves from oppression, that girls could ensure their independence through education, and that they should develop new mental and physical qualities fitting for the new era.[126][54] The end of the practice of foot binding is seen as a significant event in the process of female emancipation in China,[127] and a major event in the history of Chinese feminism.[citation needed]

In the late 20th century, some feminists have pushed back against the prevailing Western critiques of foot binding, arguing that the presumption that foot binding was done solely for the sexual pleasure of men denies the agency and cultural influence of women.[128][32]

Other interpretations

[edit]

Some scholars such as Laurel Bossen and Hill Gates reject the notion that bound feet in China were considered more beautiful, or that it was a means of male control over women, a sign of class status, or a chance for women to marry well (in general, bound women did not improve their class position by marriage). Foot binding is believed to have spread from elite women to civilian women and there were large differences in each region. The body and labor of unmarried daughters belonged to their parents, thereby the boundaries between work and kinship for women were blurred.[71] They argued that foot binding was an instrumental means to reserve women to handwork, and can be seen as a way by mothers to tie their daughters down, train them in handwork, and keep them close at hand.[129][130] This argument has been challenged by John Shepherd in his book Footbinding as Fashion, and shows there was no connection between handicraft industries and the proportion of women bound in Hebei.[131]

Foot binding was common when women could do light industry, but where women were required to do heavy farm work they often did not bind their feet because it hindered physical work. These scholars argued that the coming of the mechanized industry at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, such as the introduction of industrial textile processes, resulted in a loss of light handwork for women, removing a reason to maintain the practice. Mechanization resulted in women who worked at home facing a crisis.[30] Coupled with changes in politics and people's consciousness, the practice of foot binding disappeared in China forever after two generations.[71][129] More specifically, the 1842 Treaty of Nanjing (after the First Opium War) opened five cities as treaty ports where foreigners could live and trade. This led to foreign citizens residing in the area, where many proselytized as Christian missionaries. These foreigners condemned many long-standing Chinese cultural practices like foot binding as "uncivilized" — marking the beginning of the end for the centuries-long practice.[93]

It has been argued that while the practice started out as a fashion, it persisted because it became an expression of Han identity after the Mongols invaded China in 1279, and later the Manchus' conquest in 1644, as it was then practised only by Han women.[clarification needed][117] During the Qing dynasty, attempts were made by the Manchus to ban the practice but failed, and it has been argued the attempts at banning may have in fact led to a spread of the practice among Han Chinese in the 17th and 18th centuries.[132] John Shepherd provides a critical review of the evidence cited for the notion that foot binding was an expression of "Han identity" and rejects this interpretation.[133]

[edit]

The bound foot has played a prominent part in many media works, both Chinese and non-Chinese, modern and traditional.[134] These depictions are sometimes based on observation or research and sometimes on rumors or supposition. Sometimes, as in the case of Pearl Buck's The Good Earth (1931), the accounts are relatively neutral or empirical, implying respect for Chinese culture.[a] Sometimes, the accounts seem intended to rouse like-minded Chinese and foreign opinion to abolish the custom, and sometimes the accounts imply condescension or contempt for China.[135]

  • Quoted in the Jin Ping Mei (c. 1610): "displaying her exquisite feet, three inches long and no wider than a thumb, very pointed and with high insteps."[136]
  • Anna Bunina mentions the custom in her 1810 fable "Пекинское ристалище" (The Peking Stadium), which describes a Chinese woman attempting to run a race and barely finishing the boys' course, yet still getting applause for the effort. Bunina used the custom as an allegory to her own difficulties in getting recognition as a poet.[137]
  • Flowers in the Mirror (1837) by Ju-Chen Li includes chapters set in the "Country of Women", where men bear children and have bound feet.[138]
  • The Three-Inch Golden Lotus (1994) by Feng Jicai[139] presents a satirical picture of the movement to abolish the practice, which is seen as part of Chinese culture.
  • In the film The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958), Ingrid Bergman portrays a British missionary to China Gladys Aylward, who is assigned as a foreigner the task by a local Mandarin to unbind the feet of young women, an unpopular order that the civil government had failed to fulfil. Later, the children are able to escape troops by walking miles to safety.
  • Ruthanne Lum McCunn wrote a biographical novel, Thousand Pieces of Gold (1981, adapted into a 1991 film), about Polly Bemis, a Chinese American pioneer woman. It describes her feet being bound and later unbound when she needed to help her family with farm labor.
  • Emily Prager's short story "A Visit from the Footbinder", from her collection of short stories of the same name (1982), describes the last few hours of a young Chinese girl's childhood before the professional footbinder arrives to initiate her into the adult woman's life of beauty and pain.[140]
  • Jung Chang's family autobiography Wild Swans presents the story of Yu-fang, the grandmother, who had bound feet from the age of two.
  • Lisa Loomer's play The Waiting Room (1994) deals with themes of body modification. One of the three main characters is an 18th-century Chinese woman who arrives in a modern hospital waiting room, seeking medical help for complications resulting from her bound feet. She describes the foot-binding process, as well as the physical and psychological harm her bound feet have caused.[141]
  • Lensey Namioka's novel Ties that Bind, Ties that Break (1999) follows a girl named Ailin in China who refuses to have her feet bound, which comes to affect her future.[142]
  • Lisa See's novel Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (2005) is about two Chinese girls who are destined to be friends. The novel is based upon the sacrifices women make to be married and includes the two girls being forced into getting their feet bound. The book was adapted into a 2011 film directed by Wayne Wang.
  • The Filipino horror film Feng Shui and its sequel Feng Shui 2 feature a ghost of a foot-bound woman inhabits a bagua and cursed those who holds the item.
  • Sieglinde Sullivan from Black Butler had her feet bound when she was young as part of the "Emerald Witch" hoax invented by the German military.
  • Lisa See's novel China Dolls (2014) describes Chinese family traditions including foot binding.
  • Xiran Jay Zhao's novel Iron Widow (2021) is set in a futuristic world inspired by medieval China that still practices foot binding. The main character, Wu Zetian, had her feet bound in childhood and suffers from chronic pain due to it.
  • Edward Rutherfurd's novel China: An Epic Novel, is set in late Qing Dynasty China, when foot binding was still common practice among Han Chinese in the north. Bright Moon, the daughter of a main character Mei-Ling, has her feet bound to increase her chances of a good marriage, and the practice is described in detail. The character soon resents that she has her feet bound, as it causes her severe pain, and stops her from participating in many activities.
  • In episode 9 of the anime series The Apothecary Diaries, a servant girl was found dead in a moat. After an autopsy, it was found that she had her feet bound.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Though The Good Earth features neutral or empirical accounts of foot binding, Buck's previous novel, East Wind: West Wind explored the unbinding of a woman's feet, experienced as frightening and painful yet finally empowering, as part of her transition into a new, more modern and more individualistic persona under her doctor husband's tutelage.

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Shepherd 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Chinese Foot Binding". BBC. Archived from the original on 2013-11-18.
  3. ^ Lim, Louisa (19 March 2007). "Footbinding: From Status Symbol to Subjugation". NPR News.
  4. ^ Hershatter 2018, p. 68.
  5. ^ a b c Lim, Louisa (19 March 2007). "Painful Memories for China's Footbinding Survivors". Morning Edition. National Public Radio. Archived from the original on 7 June 2022.
  6. ^ Ko 2002, pp. 32–34.
  7. ^ Ko 2002, pp. 42.
  8. ^ a b Victoria Pitts-Taylor, ed. (2008). Cultural Encyclopedia of the Body. Greenwood. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-313-34145-8.
  9. ^ "Han Chinese Footbinding". Textile Research Centre.
  10. ^ Xu Ji 徐積 《詠蔡家婦》: 「但知勒四支,不知裹两足。」(translation: "knowing about arranging the four limbs, but not about binding her two feet); Su Shi 蘇軾 《菩薩蠻》:「塗香莫惜蓮承步,長愁羅襪凌波去;只見舞回風,都無行處踪。偷穿宮樣穩,並立雙趺困,纖妙說應難,須從掌上看。」
  11. ^ Patricia Buckley Ebrey (1 December 1993). The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period. University of California Press. pp. 37–39. ISBN 9780520913486.
  12. ^ a b c d e Morris, Ian (2011). Why the West Rules - For Now: The Patterns of History, and What They Reveal About the Future. McClelland & Stewart. p. 424. ISBN 978-1-55199-581-6.
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  14. ^ "墨庄漫录-宋-张邦基 8-卷八". Archived from the original on 2015-02-21. Retrieved 2015-02-21.
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  16. ^ 车若水. "脚气集". Original text: 妇人纒脚不知起于何时,小儿未四五岁,无罪无辜而使之受无限之苦,纒得小来不知何用。
  17. ^ Ko 2005, pp. 187–191.
  18. ^ Ko 2002, pp. 21–24.
  19. ^ Marie-Josèphe Bossan (2004). The Art of the Shoe. Parkstone Press Ltd. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-85995-803-2.
  20. ^ Ebrey, Patricia (2003-09-02). Women and the Family in Chinese History. Routledge. p. 196. ISBN 9781134442935.
  21. ^ Haw, Stephen G. (2006-11-22). Marco Polo's China: A Venetian in the Realm of Khubilai Khan. Routledge. pp. 55–56. ISBN 9781134275427.
  22. ^ a b Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee (1 February 2012). Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation. SUNY Press. pp. 141–. ISBN 978-0-7914-8179-0.
  23. ^ Valerie Steele; John S. Major (2000). China Chic: East Meets West. Yale University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-300-07931-9.
  24. ^ Ping Wang (2000). Aching for Beauty: Footbinding in China. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 32–. ISBN 978-0-8166-3605-1.
  25. ^ Anders Hansson (1996). Chinese Outcasts: Discrimination and Emancipation in Late Imperial China. Brill. p. 46. ISBN 978-9004105966.
  26. ^ van Gulik 1961, p. 222.
  27. ^ Brown et al. 2012, pp. 1035–1067.
  28. ^ Gates 2014, p. 8.
  29. ^ Manning, Mary Ellen (10 May 2007). "China's "Golden Lotus Feet" - Foot-binding Practice". Archived from the original on 28 September 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
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  31. ^ Bossen, Laurel (2004). "Film Review — Footbinding: Search for the Three Inch Golden Lotus". Anthropologica. 48 (2): 301–303. doi:10.2307/25606208. JSTOR 25606208.
  32. ^ a b Hershatter 2018, p. 66.
  33. ^ a b c Simon Montlake (November 13, 2009). "Bound by History: The Last of China's 'Lotus-Feet' Ladies". Wall Street Journal.
  34. ^ Vincent Yu-Chung Shih; Yu-chung Shi (1968). The Taiping Ideology: Its Sources, Interpretations, and Influences. University of Washington Press. pp. 27–29. ISBN 978-0-295-73957-1.
  35. ^ Olivia Cox-Fill (1996). For Our Daughters: How Outstanding Women Worldwide Have Balanced Home and Career. Praeger Publishers. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-275-95199-3.
  36. ^ a b Hershatter 2018, p. 46.
  37. ^ a b c d Blake, C. Fred (2008). Bonnie G. Smith (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History. Oxford University Press USA. pp. 327–329. ISBN 978-0-19-514890-9.
  38. ^ Mary I. Edwards (1986). The Cross-cultural Study of Women: A Comprehensive Guide. Feminist Press at The City University of New York. pp. 255–256. ISBN 978-0-935312-02-7.
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  40. ^ Ko 2005, p. 14–17.
  41. ^ a b c Whitefield, Brent (2008). "The Tian Zu Hui (Natural Foot Society): Christian Women in China and the Fight against Footbinding" (PDF). Southeast Review of Asian Studies. 30: 203–12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2016.
  42. ^ Zito, Angela (March 2007). "Secularizing the Pain of Footbinding in China: Missionary and Medical Stagings of the Universal Body". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 75 (1): 1–24. doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfl062. JSTOR 4139836. PMID 20681094.
  43. ^ Ko 2005, p. 14–16.
  44. ^ Vincent Goossaert; David A. Palmer (15 April 2011). The Religious Question in Modern China. University of Chicago Press. pp. 70–. ISBN 978-0-226-30416-8. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  45. ^ a b Drucker, "The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement 1840-1911", in Historical Reflections (1981), 182.
  46. ^ Rachel Keeling. "The Anti-Footbinding Movement, 1872-1922: A Cause for China Rather Than Chinese Women", in Social and Political Movements 1 (2008), 12.
  47. ^ a b Levy, Howard S. (1991). The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Tradition of Foot Binding in China. New York: Prometheus Books. p. 322.
  48. ^ Guangqiu Xu (2011). American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835–1935. Transaction Publishers. p. 257. ISBN 978-1-4128-1829-2.
  49. ^ Hershatter 2018, p. 67.
  50. ^ a b Keeling. "The Anti-Footbinding Movement, 1872-1922: A Cause for China Rather Than Chinese Women", in Social and Political Movements 1 (2008), 14.
  51. ^ Connie A. Shemo (2011). The Chinese Medical Ministries of Kang Cheng and Shi Meiyu, 1872–1937. Lehigh University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-61146-086-5.
  52. ^ Liang Qichao. "On Women's Education", in The Birth of Chinese Feminism: Essential Texts in Transnational Theory, by Lydia He Liu, Rebecca E. Karl and Dorothy Ko (Columbia University Press, 2013), 202.
  53. ^ Mary Keng Mun Chung (1 May 2005). Chinese Women in Christian Ministry. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-5198-5.
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  56. ^ Appiah, Kwame Anthony (2010-10-22). "The Art of Social Change: Campaigns against foot-binding and genital mutilation". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-09-03.
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  61. ^ Gamble, Sidney D. (September 1943). "The Disappearance of Foot-Binding in Tinghsien". American Journal of Sociology. 49 (2): 181–183. doi:10.1086/219351. JSTOR 2770363. S2CID 72732576.
  62. ^ Hu, Alex. "The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement". Historical Reflections, Vol. 8, No. 3, Women in China: Current Directions in Historical Scholarship, Fall 1981, pp. 179–199. "Besides improvements in civil engineering, progress was made in social areas as well. The traditional Chinese practice of foot binding was widespread in Taiwan's early years. Traditional Chinese society perceived women with smaller feet as being more beautiful. Women would bind their feet with long bandages to stunt growth; housemaids were divided into those with bound feet and those without. The former served the daughters of the house, while the latter were assigned heavier work. This practice was later regarded as barbaric. In the early years of the Japanese colonial period, the Foot-binding Liberation Society was established to promote the idea of natural feet, but its influence was limited. The fact that women suffered higher casualties in the 1906 Meishan quake with 551 men and 700 women dead and 1,099 men and 1,334 women injured—very different from the situation in Japan—raised public concern. Foot binding was blamed and this gave impetus to the drive to stamp out the practice."
  63. ^ Favazza, Armando R. (2011), Bodies under Siege: Self-mutilation, Nonsuicidal Self-injury, and Body Modification in Culture and Psychiatry, p. 118.
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  65. ^ Li Xiu-ying. "Women with Bound Feet in China: Cessation of Bound Feet during the Communist Era". University of Virginia. Archived 2020-07-31 at the Wayback Machine. Excerpts from When I was a girl in China, stories collected by Joseph Rupp.
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  67. ^ "Unbound: China's last 'lotus feet' – in pictures". The Guardian. 15 June 2015.
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References and further reading

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Attributution
  •  This article incorporates text from Encyclopædia of religion and ethics, Volume 8, by James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray, a publication from 1916, now in the public domain in the United States.
  •  This article incorporates text from The religions of China: Confucianism and Tâoism described and compared with Christianity, by James Legge, a publication from 1880, now in the public domain in the United States.
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