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Encyclopedia > Footbinding
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The bound feet of an adult woman

Foot binding (纏足, 包腳, 裹小腳, or 紮腳) is an obsolete Chinese custom, practiced for centuries. Some, such as Sigmund Freud, consider the practice fetishistic, as it was done for aesthetic reasons. Young girls' feet, usually at age 6 but sometimes earlier, were wrapped in tight bandages so they could not grow normally, would break and become deformed as they reached adulthood. The feet would remain small and dysfunctional, prone to infection, paralysis, and muscular atrophy.


The practice of foot binding began during the Song Dynasty, around 960. According to legend, women were bound in this way to replicate an imperial concubine who was required to dance with her feet bound. By the 12th century, the practice had become widespread and severe— girls' feet were bound so tightly and early in life that, as adults, they were unable to walk significant distances, essentially crippled and deprived of all autonomy. Foot binding was a status symbol, since only the wealthy could afford to keep women unproductive. The Hongwu Emperor's consort, born of humble origin, had normal feet (considered unattractive by the standards of the culture). Emperor Hongwu killed the neighbours of those who mocked him.


If a girl's feet were bound in this custom, beginning in infancy, four toes on each foot would break by age 3; the first ("big toe") sometimes remained intact. The feet were desired not to grow any larger than 10 cm (4 in). Bound feet would bend, becoming so concave they were sometimes described as "lotus hooks". Girls would suffer intense pain throughout the binding process.


In 1911, the Republic of China government banned foot binding, a practice considered barbaric by other societies. According to a study conducted by the University of California at San Francisco, "As the practice waned, some girls' feet were released after initial binding, leaving less severe deformities." However, some effects of foot binding are permanent: some elderly Chinese women today suffer from disabilities related to bound feet.


During the Communist rebellions of the 20th century, victims of foot binding were, in some cases, further abused. As symbols of a past era, as well as members of the overthrown upper class, they were often beaten by the revolutionaries, though this practice was illegal.


Foot binding is rarely, if ever, practiced today. All modern societies would treat the behavior as child abuse and punish it accordingly. It is commonly cited by sociologists and anthropologists as an example where an extreme deformity (by the standards of both modern societies and from a medical viewpoint) can be viewed as beauty, and also where immense human suffering can be inflicted in the pursuit of a beauty standard.


While bound feet were considered beautiful by some men, a misconception is that they found the deformed foot, in the flesh, erotic. Most often, the men would never see the woman's feet, as they were concealed within tiny "lotus shoes". Feng Hsun said, "If you remove the shoes and bindings, the aesthetic feeling will be destroyed forever."


Photographs of bound feet— grotesque medical curiosities by today's standard— are featured on some shock sites.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Marie Vento: One Thousand Years of Chinese Footbinding: Its Origins, Popularity and Demise (0 words)
In its most extreme form, footbinding was the act of wrapping a three- to five-year old girl's feet with binding so as to bend the toes under, break the bones and force the back of the foot together.
Footbinding can not be shown to have been necessary to group survival as it conferred obvious disadvantages on its recipients, who given a choice, might not have participated in it.
That footbinding was legitimized by scholars and tied to the custom of the patriarchal Chinese family, perpetuating the kinship system, was no adequate stronghold against the forward momentum of history, education and labor opportunities, and capitalist individualism.
Circumcision and Footbinding (2936 words)
In its most extreme form, footbinding was the wrapping of a three- to five-year old girl's feet with strips of cloth, bending the toes under the foot, breaking the bones and forcing the heel toward the front of the sole.
Nonetheless, footbinding abolished in a way that was both chaotic and unfair, with sloganeering and excesses of the anti-footbinding movement of the 1920's reminiscent of Cultural Revolution excesses, claiming many families as its victims.
For men footbinding is troubling because it suggests not only that men are capable of perceiving a gruesomely crippled foot as an object of sexual pleasure, but that they are further capable of using their superior social position to coerce women to conform to a standard of beauty that is both deformed and grotesque.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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