TEXT E A review of the treatment
of female characters in Chinese fiction reveals that Chinese social attitudes
have undergone dramatic changes. Prior to twentieth century, women in novels
were stereotyped lacking any features that made them unique individuals and were
also subject to numerous restrictions imposed by the male-dominated culture.
While authors of these novels often sympathetically portrayed heroines who
experienced social depression. They never questioned the position of women in
Chinese culture. Not until the early twentieth century did Chinese fiction focus
on women’s emancipation, and then the subject became the backdrop of most novels
that addressed the issue. After the Communist party established the People’s
Republic in the late 1940’s, attitudes changed again: the gaining of women’s
rights was treated as one of many ongoing social revolutions, although from the
beginning Communist Party policy subordinated the women’s struggle to the class
Struggle. In spite of the fact that the authors who dealt with
women’s issues prior to 1949 agreed in principle that reforms had to be
instituted, the outlook they depicted for reform was bleak. In their novels a
pattern recurs: after an initial break with social conversations, women falter
in their goals or tragically end their lives, defeated by the overwhelming
pressures of those conventions. If some writers viewed the emancipation of women
as an achievable end, most tended to regard it as related to other seemingly
unattainable social changes. Individualism alone would not lead to emancipation.
Taking his cue from Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House, in which the heroine, Nora,
leaves home because she resents her husband’s treating her like a child. The
writer Lu Xun warned that Nora would need money to support herself; she must
have economic rights in order to survive. In contrast to this
view of women in fiction in the early part of the century, fiction after the
late 1940’s is not so pessimistic. The deeper problems of socially prescribed
roles for wife and daughter, for example, are not explored, but greater freedom
for women is presented as the product of collective action. Novels of this
period focus primarily on the specific issues: voluntary marriage and equal
participation in work. After Mao Zedong’s announcement of guidelines for a
literature of social realism, this emphasis on women’s rights became more
pronounced. Most women in fiction after 1949 conform to the goals set for them
by Communist party policy but still experience conflicts within family and group
relationships as a result of the double burden placed on them by their domestic
and job roles. Fiction of this period also depicts the problems of compensating
women adequately for their work and of giving them access to jobs previously
performed by men. Although these novels forcefully suggest that such reforms
face much resistance, all clearly conclude that eventually this resistance can
be overcome. And, in fact, the past two decades have seen the beginning of some
of these reforms in the lives of women in the People’s Republic of
China. According to the passage, the struggle of Chinese women for liberation is portrayed in post-1949 Chinese literature as ______.
A.a struggle with roots in pre-twentieth century events B.a product of pre-1949 social reforms C.subordinate to the maintenance of the traditional social patterns D.part of a much larger struggle for liberation