Women

Lessons for Women, Ban Zhao [Pan Chao, ca. 45-116]

December 13, 1901

Ban Zhao was the younger sister of Han court historian Ban Gu. When he died in 92 CE, she completed his work on a history of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BCE - 8 CE). She composed Nu Jie [Lessons for Women], from which the following is extracted in about 80 CE.

Jobs and Kids: Female Employment and Fertility in China

Stanford University presents a discussion with Professor Hai Fang on how female off-farm employment affects fertility in China.

China Onscreen Biennial: The Cremator (焚尸人 ) US Premiere

Part of the UCLA Confucius Institute's inaugural China Onscreen Biennial (银幕中国双年展)project, Director Peng Tao achieves soaring humanism and lyricism in this portrait of life among the lonely. Cremator Cao makes a living incinerating the dead, while secretly selling “ghost wives” to bereaved families seeking companions for their recently deceased, single sons.

Women’s Empowerment in the Xi’an Muslim District, China

The Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford University presents a talk by Maris Boyd Gilette on women's empowerment among the Chinese Muslims (or Hui) who live in Xi'an's Muslim district.

Chinese Female Filmmakers Screening Series

USC School of Cinematic Arts presents the Chinese Female Filmmakers Screening Series.

Women in Chinese Painting

Freer Gallery of Art presents an exhibition on Chinese paintings that capture women's roles in traditional Chinese society.

Regulating Prostitution in Republican China: International Models and Domestic Adaptations

Elizabeth Remick will talk about regulating prostitution in China from 1911-1949 at Harvard University.

Women in Early Medieval China

The Bowers Museum presents a lecture with Suzanne Cahill.

Pages