Building Power: Conspicuous Consumption, Projection of Identity, and Female Power in the Late Seventh and Early Eighth Centuries

Rebecca Doran

PDF(324 KB)
PDF(324 KB)
Front. Lit. Stud. China ›› 2012, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (4) : 472-489. DOI: 10.3868/s010-001-012-0027-0
research-article
research-article

Building Power: Conspicuous Consumption, Projection of Identity, and Female Power in the Late Seventh and Early Eighth Centuries

Author information +
History +

Abstract

This article explores propaganda and self-portrayals among women rulers in seventh and eighth century Tang China, a unique era in which court politics were dominated by female leaders. I analyze the way in which these leaders themselves wished to be rhetorically constructed, the images and allusions with which they desired to be figured, and the way in which they were rhetorically reconstructed by later writers after their deaths. I focus on the theme of auspiciousness—in particular, the definition of the “natural” in relation to gender identity and power. Female imagery is deployed in late seventh- and early eighth-century works to create the image of a particular brand of far-reaching, generative power possessed and/or desired by the leaders of the time. Beyond revealing the images and allusions with which the female power-holders wished to hear themselves be described and exalted, and what occasions were deemed worthy of exalting, these works offer a fascinating counterpoint to materials which retroactively defame this image. The rhetorical strategies and images later used to delegitimize and denigrate the power of these women often represent opposite treatments of themes present in the court literature from the Zhou-Jinglong era. This paper argues that reconstructions of these women’s identities as female power-holders indicate the prerogative of later writers to reshape their images in accordance with their own judgments, conceptualizations, and fears of female power.

Keywords

Tang women / Tang culture / Empress Wu / court literature / gender roles

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Rebecca Doran. Building Power: Conspicuous Consumption, Projection of Identity, and Female Power in the Late Seventh and Early Eighth Centuries. Front Liter Stud Chin, 2012, 6(4): 472‒489 https://doi.org/10.3868/s010-001-012-0027-0

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

2014 Higher Education Press and Brill
PDF(324 KB)

Accesses

Citations

Detail

Sections
Recommended

/