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    Woman Hating: A Radical Look at Sexuality

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      which equal in sheer horror and sadism the extermination o f Native Americans and Hitler’s massacre o f the Jews. Those two horrendous slaughters have found a

      place, however tenuous, in the “conscience” o f “man. ”

      Acts o f genocide against women have barely been noticed, and they have never evoked rage, or horror, or sorrow. That sexist hatred equals racist hatred in its

      intensity, irrationality, and contempt for the sanctity

      o f human life these two examples clearly demonstrate.

      That women have not been exterminated, and will not

      be (at least until the technology o f creating life in the

      laboratory is perfected) can be attributed to our presumed ability to bear children and, more importantly 93

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      Woman Hating

      no doubt, to the relative truth that men prefer to fuck

      cunts who are nominally alive. I except here necrophili-

      acs, those pure and unsullied princes, whose story begins where ours ends.

      In addition, in any war, in any violence between

      tribes or nations, a specific war crime is perpetrated

      against women —that of rape. Every woman raped

      during a political nation-state war is the victim of a

      much larger war, planetary in its dimensions —the war,

      more declared than we can bear to know, that men wage

      against women. That war had its most gruesome, grotesque expression when Chinese men bound the feet of Chinese women and when British, Welsh, Irish,

      Scottish, German, Dutch, French, Swiss, Italian, Spanish,

      and Amerikan men had women burned at the stake in

      the name of God the Father and His only Son.

      F O O T B I N D I N G E V E N T

      Instructions Before Reading Chapter

      1. Find a piece o f cloth 10 feet long and 2 inches wide

      2. Find a pair o f children’s shoes

      3. Bend all toes except the big one under and into the

      sole o f the foot. W rap the cloth around these toes

      and then around the heel. Bring the heel and toes as

      close together as possible. W rap the full length o f

      the cloth as tightly as possible

      4. Squeeze foot into children’s shoes

      5. Walk

      6. Imagine that you are 5 years old

      7. Imagine being like this for the rest o f your life

      C H A P T E R 6

      Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

      T he origins o f Chinese footbinding, as o f Chinese

      thought in general, belong to that amorphous entity

      called antiquity. The 10th century marks the beginning o f the physical, intellectual, and spiritual dehumanization o f women in China through the institution o f footbinding. That institution itself, the implicit belief

      in its necessity and beauty, and the rigor with which it

      was practiced lasted another 10 centuries. T here were

      sporadic attempts at emancipating the foot —some

      artists, intellectuals, and women in positions o f power

      were the proverbial drop in the bucket. Those attempts,

      modest though they were, were doomed to failure:

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      Woman Hating

      footbinding was a political institution which reflected

      and perpetuated the sociological and psychological inferiority of women; footbinding cemented women to a certain sphere, with a certain function —women were

      sexual objects and breeders. Footbinding was mass

      attitude, mass culture —it was the key reality in a way

      of life lived by real women— 10 centuries times that

      many millions o f them.

      It is generally thought that footbinding originated as

      an innovation among the dancers of the Imperial

      harem. Sometime between the 9th and 11th centuries,

      Emperor Li Yu ordered a favorite ballerina to achieve

      the “pointed look. ” The fairy tale reads like this:

      Li Yu had a favored palace concubine named

      Lovely Maiden who was a slender-waisted beauty and

      a gifted dancer. He had a six-foot high lotus constructed for her out o f gold; it was decorated lavishly with pearls and had a carmine lotus carpet in the

      center. Lovely Maiden was ordered to bind her feet

      with white silk cloth to make the tips look like the

      points o f a moon sickle. She then danced in the center

      of the lotus, whirling about like a rising cloud. 1

      From this original event, the bound foot received the

      euphemism “Golden Lotus, ” though it is clear that

      Lovely Maiden’s feet were bound loosely— she could still

      dance.

      A later essayist, a true foot gourmand, described 58

      varieties of the human lotus, each one graded on a 9-

      point scale. For example:

      T ype: Lotus petal, New moon, Harmonious bow,

      Bamboo shoot, Water chestnut

      Specifications: plumpness, softness, fineness

      Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

      97

      Rank:

      Divine Quality (A-1), perfectly plump, soft and fine

      Wondrous Quality (A-2), weak and slender

      Immortal Quality (A-3), straight-boned, independent

      Precious Article (B-1), peacocklike, too wide, dis-

      proportioned

      Pure Article (B-2), gooselike, too long and thin

      Seductive Article (B-3), fleshy, short, wide, round

      (the disadvantage of this foot was that its owner

      could withstand a blowing wind)

      Excessive Article (C-1), narrow but insufficiently

      pointed

      Ordinary Article (C-2), plump and common

      False Article (C-3), monkeylike large heel (could

      climb)

      T he distinctions only emphasize that footbinding

      was a rather hazardous operation. T o break the bones

      involved or to modify the pressure o f the bindings irregularly had embarrassing consequences — no girl could bear the ridicule involved in being called a “largefooted Demon” and the shame o f being unable to marry.

      Even the possessor o f an A - 1 Golden Lotus could

      not rest on her laurels —she had to observe scrupulously

      the taboo-ridden etiquette o f bound femininity: (1) do

      not walk with toes pointed upwards; (2) do not stand

      with heels seemingly suspended in midair; (3) do not

      move skirt when sitting; (4) do not move feet when

      lying down. T h e same essayist concludes his treatise

      with this most sensible advice (directed to the gentlemen o f course):

      Do not remove the bindings to look at her bare feet,

      but be satisfied with its external appearance. Enjoy the

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      Woman Hating

      outward impression, for if you remove the shoes and

      bindings the aesthetic feeling will be destroyed forever. 2

      Indeed. The real feet looked like this:

      (feet: 3 to 4 inches in length)

      The physical process which created this foot is

      described by Howard S. Levy in Chinese Footbinding:

      The History of a Curious Erotic Custom:

      The success or failure of footbinding depended on

      skillful application of a bandage around each foot. The

      bandage, about two inches wide and ten feet long, was

      Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

      99

      wrapped in the following way. One end was placed on

      the inside of the instep, and from there it was carried

      over the small toes so as to force the toes in and towards the sole. The large toe was left unbound. The bandage was then
    wrapped around the heel so forcefully that heel and toes were drawn closer together.

      The process was then repeated from the beginning

      until the entire bandage had been applied. The foot of

      the young child was subjected to a coercive and unremitting pressure, for the object was not merely to confine the foot but to make the toes bend under and

      into the sole and bring the heel and sole as close together as physically possible. 3

      A C h ris tia n m is s io n a ry o b s e rve d :

      The flesh often became putrescent during the binding

      and portions sloughed off from the sole; sometimes

      one or more toes dropped off. 4

      A n e ld e rly C h in e s e w o m a n , as late as 1934, re m e m b e re d v iv id ly h e r c h ild h o o d e x p e rie n c e : Born into an old-fashioned family at P’ing-hsi, I was

      inflicted with the pain of footbinding when I was seven

      years old. I was an active child who liked to jump about,

      but from then on my free and optimistic nature vanished. Elder Sister endured the process from six to eight years of age [this means that it took Elder Sister two years to attain the 3-inch foot]. It was in the first lunar month of my seventh year that my ears were

      pierced and fitted with gold earrings. I was told that a

      girl had to suffer twice, through ear piercing and footbinding. Binding started in the second lunar month; mother consulted references in order to select an

      auspicious day for it. I wept and hid in a neighbor’s

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      Woman Hating

      home, but Mother found me, scolded me, and dragged

      me home. She shut the bedroom door, boiled water,

      and from a box withdrew binding, shoes, knife, needle,

      and thread. I begged for a one-day postponement, but

      Mother refused: “Today is a lucky day, ” she said. “ If

      bound today, your feet will never hurt; if bound tomorrow they will. ” She washed and placed alum on my feet and cut the toenails. She then bent my toes toward

      the plantar with a binding cloth ten feet long and two

      inches wide, doing the right foot first and then the

      left. She finished binding and ordered me to walk,

      but when I did the pain proved unbearable.

      That night, Mother wouldn’t let me remove the

      shoes. My feet felt on fire and I couldn’t sleep; Mother

      struck me for crying. On the following days, I tried

      to hide but was forced to walk on my feet. Mother hit

      me on my hands and feet for resisting. Beatings and

      curses were my lot for covertly loosening the wrappings. The feet were washed and rebound after three or four days, with alum added. After several months,

      all toes but the big one were pressed against the inner

      surface. Whenever I ate f ish or freshly killed meat,

      my feet would swell, and the pus would drip. Mother

      criticized me for placing pressure on the heel in walking, saying that my feet would never assume a pretty shape. Mother would remove the bindings and wipe

      the blood and pus which dripped from my feet. She

      told me that only with the removal o f the flesh could

      my feet become slender. If I mistakenly punctured a

      sore, the blood gushed like a stream. My somewhat

      fleshy big toes were bound with small pieces o f cloth and

      forced upwards, to assume a new moon shape.

      Every two weeks, I changed to new shoes. Each

      new pair was one- to two-tenths o f an inch smaller than

      the previous one. The shoes were unyielding, and it

      took pressure to get into them. Though I wanted to

      sit passively by the K’ang, Mother forced me to move

      Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

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      around. After changing more than ten pairs of shoes,

      my feet were reduced to a little over four inches. I

      had been in binding for a month when my younger

      sister started; when no one was around, we would

      weep together. In summer, my feet smelled offensively because of pus and blood; in winter, my feet felt cold because of lack of circulation and hurt if

      they got too near the K'ang and were struck by warm

      air currents. Four of the toes were curled in like so

      many dead caterpillars; no outsider would ever have

      believed that they belonged to a human being. It took

      two years to achieve the three-inch model. My toenails pressed against the flesh like thin paper. The heavily-creased plantar couldn't be scratched when it

      itched or soothed when it ached. My shanks were thin,

      my feet became humped, ugly, and odiferous; how I

      envied the natural-footed! 5

      Bound feet were crippled and excruciatingly painful. T h e woman was actually “walking” on the outside o f toes which had been bent under into the sole o f the

      foot. T he heel and instep o f the foot resembled the sole

      and heel o f a high-heeled boot. Hard callouses formed;

      toenails grew into the skin; the feet were pus-filled and

      bloody; circulation was virtually stopped. T h e foot-

      bound woman hobbled along, leaning on a cane, against

      a wall, against a servant. T o keep her balance she took

      very short steps. She was actually falling with every

      step and catching herself with the next. Walking required tremendous exertion.

      Footbinding also distorted the natural lines o f the

      female body. It caused the thighs and buttocks, which

      were always in a state o f tension, to become somewhat swollen (which men called “voluptuous”). A cu­

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      rious belief developed among Chinese men that footbinding produced a most useful alteration of the vagina. A Chinese diplomat explained:

      The smaller the woman’s foot, the more wondrous

      become the folds o f the vagina. (There was the saying: the smaller the feet, the more intense the sex urge. ) Therefore marriages in Ta-t’ung (where binding

      is most effective) often take place earlier than elsewhere. Women in other districts can produce these folds artificially, but the only way is by footbinding,

      which concentrates development in this one place.

      There consequendy develop layer after layer (of folds

      within the vagina); those who have personally experienced this (in sexual intercourse) feel a supernatural exaltation. So the system o f footbinding was not really oppressive. 6

      Medical authorities confirm that physiologically footbinding had no effect whatsoever on the vagina, although it did distort the direction of the pelvis. The belief in the wondrous folds of the vagina of footbound

      woman was pure mass delusion, a projection of lust

      onto the feet, buttocks, and vagina of the crippled

      female. Needless to say, the diplomat’s rationale for

      finding footbinding “not really oppressive” confused

      his “supernatural exaltation” with her misery and

      mutilation.

      Bound feet, the same myth continues, “made the

      buttocks more sensual, [and] concentrated life-giving

      vapors on the upper part of the body, making the face

      more attractive. ” 7 If, due to a breakdown in the flow

      o f these “life-giving vapors, ” an ugly woman was foot-

      bound and still ugly, she need not despair, for an A -1

      Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

      103

      Golden Lotus could compensate for a C-3 face and

      figure.

      But to return to herstory, how did our Chinese

      ballerina become the millions o f women stretched over

      10 ce
    nturies? T h e transition from palace dancer to population at large can be seen as part o f a class dynamic.

      T h e emperor sets the style, the nobility copies it, and

      the lower classes climbing ever upward do their best

      to emulate it. T he upper class bound the feet o f their

      ladies with the utmost severity. T h e Lady, unable to

      walk, remained properly invisible in her boudoir, an

      ornament, weak and small, a testimony to the wealth

      and privilege o f the man who could afford to keep h e r—

      to keep her idle. Doing no manual labor, she did not need

      her feet either. Only on the rarest o f occasions was she

      allowed outside o f the incarcerating walls o f her home,

      and then only in a sedan chair behind heavy curtains.

      T he lower a woman’s class, the less could such idleness

      be supported: the larger the feet. T h e women who had

      to work for the economic survival o f the family still

      had bound feet, but the bindings were looser, the feet

      bigger—after all, she had to be able to walk, even if

      slowly and with little balance.

      Footbinding was a visible brand. Footbinding did

      not emphasize the differences between men and women —it

      created them, and they were then perpetuated in the

      name o f morality. Footbinding functioned as the C erberus o f morality and ensured female chastity in a nation o f women who literally could not “run around. ”

      Fidelity, and the legitimacy o f children, could be reckoned on.

      T he minds o f footbound women were as contracted

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      Woman Hating

      as their feet. Daughters were taught to cook, supervise

      the household, and embroider shoes for the Golden

      Lotus. Intellectual and physical restriction had the usual

      male justification. Women were perverse and sinful,

      lewd and lascivious, if left to develop naturally. The

      Chinese believed that being bom a woman was payment

      for evils committed in a previous life. Footbinding was

      designed to spare a woman the disaster of another such

      incarnation.

      Marriage and the family are the twin pillars of all

      patriarchal cultures. Bound feet, in China, were the

     


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