Prostitutes and courtesans in the confucian moral universe of Late Ming China (1550-1644)

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Abstract

This study pursues three goals: to unravel the socio-economic conditions which pushed women into prostitution and courtesanship, to analyse their position in Chinese society, and to relate what changes occurred at the end of the Ming dynasty that affected their status. According to contemporary judicial regulations, both prostitutes and courtesans were classified as "entertainers", and therefore had the status of jianmin [mean people], which made them "outcasts" and pariahs. But there were great differences, beyond the bestowal of sexual favours, in the kind of work these women performed. That courtesans operated at the elite level of society, and that they were often indistinguishable from women born into the upper or gentry class, is indicative of this era's blurry social strata, which has prompted scholars and writers to elevate the place of the educated courtesan in Ming society. © Copyright Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 2011.

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APA

Zurndorfer, H. T. (2011, December). Prostitutes and courtesans in the confucian moral universe of Late Ming China (1550-1644). International Review of Social History. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020859011000411

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