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A SEVERE CRITICISM.

CHINA’S MODERN WOMEN. A curse to her parents in girlhood, and a dead-weight to her husband in marriage, is the deplorable offering oi modern Chinese women, according to Chinese men writers, who are terrified at the extremism of Chinese women s emancipation ip China. The verv idea that the birth of New China has raised the status of Chinese girls to the same level as Chinese hoys seems awesome to some conservative Chinese observers. Schools have lifted the' ban against girls, commercial houses have employed them “without discrimination,” and the law, it is lamented, has even gone so far as to “grant unmarried women equal rights of inheritance with boys.” The result,, as examined bv Paul Iv. Whang, in the “China Weekly Review” (Shanghai), is that in addition to political revolution, much advertised in the foreign Press, China has been undergoing a social revolution “of greater consequence,” to which the world has not so far given much attention. It is not Western civilisation that is blamed so much by Mr W’hang, as the fact that the modern Chinese girl is too much under its influence and “blindly worships” everything imported from Europe and America. We are told: “She bobs her hair, puts on foreignstyle dresses and shoes, and carries foreign-made handbags. Frpm head to foot, everything on her, and everything she carries, either is of foreign make or a domestic imitation or foreign goods. To be sure,, she is afraid of no men. and goes with them to have a good time in dancing halls and cinema houses. She stays out late at night, and enjoys as much freedom as her brothers. While in daily pursuit of pleasure and excitement she looks upon the home life as dreary and tiresome, and domestic affairs as trivial and unworthy. Thus she neither goes into the kitchen nor makes her own clothes, as her older sisters did. She defies the orders of her parents, and laughs at the old teachings of female virtues. She may attend the school, hut she does so not for the sake of education, hut for bettering her chances in selecting a husband. At school her curriculum is to learn new dancing steps and imported love-songs. She is modernised so far as her personal appearance is concerned, and besides that there is nothing in her which commands ouirespect. W’hile a girl, she is a ciirse to her parents; and, when married, she is a burden to her husband.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AG19300322.2.13

Bibliographic details

Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 137, 22 March 1930, Page 3

Word Count
412

A SEVERE CRITICISM. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 137, 22 March 1930, Page 3

A SEVERE CRITICISM. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 137, 22 March 1930, Page 3