Gender & History ISSN 0953-5233
Yunxiang GAO, ‘Nationalist and Feminist Discourses on Jianmei (Robust Beauty) during China’s “National Crisis” in the 1930s’
Gender & History, Vol.18 No.3 November 2006, pp. 546–573.
Nationalist and Feminist Discourses on
Jianmei (Robust Beauty) during China’s
‘National Crisis’ in the 1930s
Yunxiang GAO
The female body – its meaning and ownership – has long served as a signifier for competing nationalist and feminist discourses on womanhood in modern China. Woman’s
body, as a site of contested meanings, reflected the uncertain status of women as national subjects.1 That uncertainty was particularly evident during China’s ‘national
crisis’ (guonan) following the 1931 Mukden Incident, which launched a series of
Japanese aggressive military manoeuvres in the north and east coast and lasted until
Japanese defeat in 1945. During that time, Chinese nationalists, attempting to reinforce
the strength of their threatened nation, encouraged Chinese women to become physically strong. As part of the state-building project, the Nationalist government went as
far as using legal and administrative procedures to enforce the development of strong
physiques and participation in tiyu (sport; physical education; physical culture)2 as a
woman’s civic obligation.
At the same time, the female body was taken as the site to hold the unchanging
essence and moral purity of the Chinese nation.3 The national leader Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-shek) and his wife Song Meiling launched the New Life Movement during
the 1930s to renew a wartime citizenry dedicated to family, society and national goals
by instilling ideas of self-discipline and moral regulation, ‘allegedly the factors behind China’s historical greatness’, and to purify and correct the morality of the masses
who were corrupted by Communism.4 Jiang declared that ‘today we all recognise the
important place of the [Confucian] ideals of li, yi, lian, chi [civility, righteousness, incorruptibility, sense of shame] in revolutionary nation-building [gemin jianguo]’. Song
Meiling described the spiritual and moral reinvigoration of Chinese society as the basis
of the nation’s political and economic reform.5 Physical discipline was soon connected
to the state’s control over the morality of its citizenry. For the 1933 Fifth National
Games, Jiang cabled from Nanchang where he was stationed with Song Meiling to
purge the Communists, stressing that ‘all types of tiyu competition require a certain
kind of discipline. Cultivating our national virtues of civility, righteousness, incorruptibility and sense of shame, while setting a good example for the younger generation,
has much to do with tiyu as well’.6
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Although male bodies also had to be trained, the burden of embodying ‘traditional
moral and spiritual greatness’ fell upon women, taken to be the weaker sex. The New
Life Movement scrutinised women’s bodies in accordance with the Confucian standards
of fenghua (‘morality’ or ‘moral transformation of [society]’), which had lain at the
heart of state-controlled moral and spiritual normative traditions since classical times.
As this essay shows, however, the campaign to discipline and train citizens’ bodies
eventually went beyond the state’s control; popular urban newspapers and magazines
promoted tiyu using the rhetoric of patriotism, modernisation, aesthetics and fashion,
which often exceeded the strictures of fenghua morality.
State and popular discourses were both informed by the ‘life reform movement’
(Lebensreformbewegung) popular in the early twentieth-century United States and
Europe, especially Germany. Advocates of the movement built a cult of ‘health’ and
‘beauty’ on the ‘rediscovery of the human body’ through sport, gymnastics, dance
and particularly ‘physical culture’ (Körperkultur) centred on popular hygiene such as
open-air exercise, diet, clothing reform and natural therapies that highlighted the sun
and nudism (Freikörperkultur).7 But the meanings of physical health and beauty, which
attempted to recapture ‘genuine’ and ‘natural’ life forces to counter ‘artificial’ modern civilisation, were publicly contested in the formation of class, gender and racial
identities.8 Henning Eichberg highlights the interaction of body culture with spatial
and environmental aspects of society. He recognises that ‘what the human body should
be, do and look like is “constructed” by diverse discourses and practices in a specific
society’.9 Similarly, when the practices and ideals of ‘health’ and ‘beauty’ – and their
multiple and contradictory meanings – were translated into China as jianmei (robust
beauty) cultivated by tiyu during the ‘national crisis’, discourses of the fit body and
physical beauty were recreated and refashioned by local dynamics. The goal of this
essay is to illuminate this process of translating the cult of ‘health’ and ‘beauty’ into
local Chinese discourses.
Scholars have analysed the interactions between tiyu, feminism and nationalism in
modern China. Fan Hong focuses on the liberating role tiyu played in freeing women’s
bodies and improving their status in Republican China. Andrew Morris challenges
Fan’s ‘liberating’ narrative by arguing that limitless manipulation and national ends in
modern tiyu trumped the possibilities for women rather than allowing them to address
and shape their identities for themselves. You Jianming’s position is contradictory.
Treating ‘female ball game players’ (nü qiuyuan) active in eastern China from 1931 to
1937 as a unique category among new urban women, You highlights their contribution
to women’s rights and liberation through ‘transcending the barriers of gender, thus
sharing honours and competing with their male counterparts for ball courts’. Through
a reading of newspapers and magazines, You explores the image of ‘female ball game
players’ and its complex interaction with the general public. Tracing the development,
goals and methods of Chinese women’s tiyu since the turn of the century, You concludes
that ‘suppressed by nationalistic and procreative issues’, women’s rights proponents
‘failed to win for the woman’s body a more autonomous elbowroom’ through tiyu. You
noted the public promotion of jianmei as fashion during the ‘national crisis’. However,
she believes that jianmei was ultimately used by men to judge women’s bodies and was
dominated by nationalist goals.10
In this essay, I show how feminist and nationalist dimensions intertwined subtly in
the translation of the modern Western categories of jianmei and tiyu into China during
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the ‘national crisis’. I examine Linglong, a weekly women’s magazine published in
Shanghai from 1931 to 1937, to show the various interactions between fenghua and the
new fashion concept of jianmei. The interaction of state-regulated female body codes
in the New Life Movement and jianmei (cultivated through tiyu) backed by a populist
feminist agenda affected popular culture in contradictory ways. On the one hand, the
plain, makeup-free style in jianmei exemplified moral women’s austerity. Conversely,
the bare legs and feet of jianmei female bodies were often viewed as ‘harmful to public
morals’ (youshang fenghua). Within these contradictions, Chinese women gained an
enabling female space through complex interactions with the nationalist agenda as
jianmei and tiyu became prevalent in fashion and the mass media.
Prasenjit Duara argues that although ‘different women’s groups and publications
loosely affiliated with the Nationalist Party expressed radical and feminist points of
view . . . the dominant political tendency represented the view of a modern patriarchy’.
He suggests that ‘women’s passivity and their being spoken for represented the political
meaning of their gender’.11 In Linglong, editorials by one of its chief editors, Ms Chen
Zhenling, and the contributions by other urban educated women, offered an alternative
voice that has been generally neglected by scholars who focus on state or institutional
forces. Women, especially those who were educated and urban, fashioned active roles
for themselves within a limited space through nuanced and complex negotiations with
the dominant but self-contradictory wartime patriarchal nationalist forces.
One of the ways that it did this was via discussion of jianmei. European life reformers
popularised and publicised ideas of the healthy and beautiful body in the cinema and
the popular press via photographs, drawings, anatomical models, textual descriptions
and exercise guides.12 Similarly, jianmei entered Chinese popular culture through the
cinema and the press, especially highly successful pictorial magazines published by
the Commercial Press and Liangyou Publishing House. Liangyou’s flagship journal,
Liangyou huabao (The Young Companion, 1926–45), ‘ushered in a phase of pictorial
journalism which reflected this urban taste for the “modern” life’.13 With the growth
of literacy among women in the Republican era, women’s publications emerged as an
integral part of the rising popular press. According to Linglong’s ‘Survey of Women’s
Magazines and Journals across the Nation’ in June 1933, there were twenty-three
women’s periodicals of various kinds across major cities in China.14
Among popular women’s periodicals, Linglong distinguished itself as the standard
for promoting jianmei and tiyu for women. In 1931 Linglong initiated a column to
advocate tiyu and advance health through tiyu photographs and articles. Readers were
asked to provide relevant materials. In 1932, an editorial stated that ‘our magazine
particularly carries tiyu news, especially women’s’.15 By 1933, the magazine was urging
its readers to recommend the magazine, ‘as the only mouthpiece for all sisters, paying
special attention to women’s jianmei’, to friends and relatives so that all could rid
themselves of their sickly appearance.16 The name Linglong (literally, chiselled) is
from the expression ‘xiaoqiao linglong’, used to describe objects or people as smallsized but elegant. According to a middle-school student athlete, Lan Diqing, ‘today
I see the little and lovely copy of Linglong, of which I have heard for a long time.
Its elegant look and rich contents show the good future of women in our nation and
explain why society views the magazine so highly’ (Figure 1).17 True to its name,
the magazine was pocket-sized, ranging in length from 30 to 80 pages. Its contents
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Figure 1: Female athletes appreciated the popular magazine Linglong. Li Yinan (on the left) from Dongnan Tiyu School, a participant
of the 1933 National Games, praised Linglong as ‘women’s parents, older brother, lawyer, teacher and camp’. A middle-school athlete
Lan Diqing (on the right) writes, ‘Today I see the little and elegant copy of Linglong, of which I have heard for a long time. Its elegant
look and rich contents show the good future of women in our nation and explain why society views the magazine so highly. In this
difficult society, women of iron and blood struggle to find their way, with help from their comrades. Let us move bricks and rafters
to build a fancy mansion, and stand on its top to shout, “Long live Chinese women [three times], and long live Linglong”’. Source:
Linglong, vol. 4, no. 3, issue 128, 17 January 1934, pp. 160–61. Courtesy of the C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
Nationalist and Feminist Discourses on Jianmei
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varied from love, sex, marriage, fashion, makeup, tiyu and entertainment to interior
decorating, popular psychology, new careers, war and politics; they took the form of
articles, advice columns and commercial advertisements as well as illustrations and
photographs. It was published by the Sanhe (Three-Harmony) Publishing House in
Shanghai, which also ran entertainment businesses such as ping-pong houses and sold
medicines to cure women’s diseases (both advertised in Linglong).18 When the first
issue of Linglong came out on 18 March 1931, it was inexpensively priced at sevenhundredths of an ounce of foreign silver, or twenty-one copper coins,19 and it was
available nationwide, in such dispersed urban centres as Chengdu, Hankou, Ji’nan,
Quanzhou, Kaifeng, Hangzhou, Mei County in Sichuan, Tianjin, Nanjing, Yunnan,
Shanghai, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Changsha and even overseas in Sumatra.20
Linglong became a multi-vocal space for women. Educated urban young women such
as students, teachers and other professionals were fans, but workers, housewives and
labourers also conversed through advice columns about new and old social situations
faced by women. Linglong called for contributions about ‘housewives, arranging the
home, sewing, cooking, education, practical issues and teachers, workers and farmers’
lives and marriages’.21 Conversely, Linglong included the voices of men, especially
those of its chief photography editor, Mr Lin Zemin, and its founder, Lin Zecang, who
were concerned with ‘women’s issues’.
Echoing the state ideology of patriotism of the 1930s, Linglong repeatedly called on
women to make sacrifices for the nation, educate themselves in politics and develop
courage, power and bodies as tough as men’s. In 1937, on the eve of Japan’s invasion
of northern China, Linglong’s editor urged feminists to prioritise nationalist concerns
because women’s liberation had to be sought through national liberation. The editor
contended that ‘the urgent task for women today is to unite and fight for the national
liberation movement because all citizens, male or female, should struggle in such a
“national crisis”’.22 At the same time, although the term ‘feminism’ (nüquan zhuyi
[zhe]) never appeared in the magazine, Linglong, in proclaiming itself on almost every
front cover to be ‘the mouthpiece of women’s circles, and the only weapon to launch
attacks on men’, exemplified a feminist agenda.23 The very ‘contradiction’ between
patriotic nationalism and feminism demonstrated the complicated interaction between
these discourses. While voicing women’s special interests, rights and identities, Linglong embraced nationalistic rhetoric that sought both to empower women and to endorse
gender equality, hence justifying and legitimising women’s expanded space.
To the editors of Linglong, the Western category jianmei and advocacy of a strong
physique for women were at the core of the magazine’s feminist agenda. The caption
to a photograph of a row of strong Western women aiming rifles reads: ‘Women’s
rights/power in the modern world are well developed [jinshi nüquan fada]’. The magazine claimed that women surpassed men in various fields, but regretted that women’s
natural physique was weaker. To counteract their ‘natural’ deficiency, women globally
should pay close attention to jianmei and tiyu.24
Consistent with the concept of jianmei as Western, Linglong presented its feminist
agenda behind jianmei in a global context by importing news and stories about women
around the world, particularly the West. The value of the stories is not in their historical
authenticity but in what they can tell us about the attitudes and sensibilities of the
editors and readers. Linglong expressed deep worry about the international trend of the
‘women going home movement’, and that ‘the good wife, wise mother’ ideal would
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negatively affect the Nationalist government. Using the rhetoric of linear historical
progress, Linglong identified that trend with ‘feudal China’, and purported that the
progressive and modern state in China that had liberated Nora would not return her
to darkness.25 They opposed the Labour Meeting of the United Nations that banned
women from heavy manual labour, arguing that no limitations should be placed on
women’s proven physical capacities. The editors pointed out that, in the United States,
the seemingly gender-neutral clause that companies should lay off one member of
married couples first actually targeted married women.
Linglong also condemned the ‘dictatorship in Europe’ for ‘pushing the wheel of history back to the darkness’. It argued that gender discrimination was the basic principle
of Nazi Germany. Although German women were sometimes praised in the Chinese
press for being as masculine as men, especially in terms of physical training, it was said
that masculine women and effeminate men were hated in Germany. Linglong declared
that Germany’s ‘Three K [Kinder, Küche, Kirche]’ movement was outmoded and an
‘insult and challenge to women in the world’.26 Linglong’s radical criticism of the
West, especially the Nazis, focused on women’s equal rights and opportunities in the
work place. The cosmopolitan outlook of Linglong may also be seen in its bilingual
covers, which offered an English title, Lin Loon Ladies’ Magazine. Although Linglong
did not explicitly declare itself to be a feminist magazine, we can infer its feminism
from its acknowledgment of women as an oppressed group, provision of a public forum
to address women’s issues, advocacy of women’s equality especially in physical and
economic capacities and engagement with international feminist movements. How it
expressed that feminism was, however, constrained by the social, and most especially
the political, context of the ‘national crisis’.
Jianmei cultivated through tiyu as Western and modern
When jianmei emerged as a significant women’s urban fashion aesthetic during China’s
‘national crisis’, it was closely associated with tiyu. For women, tiyu, or the cultivation
of muscle strength, was a necessary tool to cultivate a jianmei body. But what exactly
was jianmei? In 1933, Linglong declared that ‘this journal pays special attention to
jianmei’, and started a ‘Beauty Advisor Column’ (meirong guwen lan), as the primary
forum for the debate on jianmei. Writers and editors contributed articles and responded
to readers’ comments.27
Jianmei cultivated through tiyu was presented as international (i.e., Western) and
modern through examples of Western women. It was argued that since their specialised schools and magazines actively advocated physical activities and health, Western women enjoyed exercise, paid close attention to their weight and posture, and were
usually very jianmei. Chinese magazines featured photographs of white women in
miniskirts, bathing suits or gym shirts and shorts, ice skating, jumping over gymnastics
horses, standing on their heads and dancing, to show that ‘Western women have gained
jianmei physiques through athletic exercise’. The camera angles frequently accentuated
bare, strong legs. The caption of a photograph of a scarcely clad woman with strong
legs and wearing high heels read, ‘it is not about new clothes; she is just showing
you her jianmei legs’.28 Magazines used paintings and photographs of nude Western
women with ‘healthy curves’ to persuade Chinese women to shift their attention away
from pretty faces and towards robust physiques.
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The primal energy evoked by the ‘natural’ athletic body became a significant theme.
Unspoilt nature – the antithesis of the contrivance of modernity – was worshipped
by European life reformers: sun and water became symbols of cleanliness, strength,
beauty and sexual innocence. Fit and beautiful nude bodies ‘framed’ in these elements
were elevated into a spiritual principle and constituted part of the pure, reverential
contemplation of nature.29 Photographic portrayals of ‘Sun Bathing’ and a ‘Primal
Fit and Healthy Life’ (Yuanshi de jianmei shenghuo), depicted nude white women
sunbathing on the beach, lying on grass in front of a pond or playing in water in various
athletic poses.30 However, Linglong also made the connection between the ‘natural’
body and the body revered by European Fascist movements, reporting that Benito
Mussolini had ordered women to pay attention to jianmei and commanded artists to
depict women’s jianmei curves because ‘a weak mother cannot give birth to strong
children’.31
Images of glamorous Hollywood stars reinforced jianmei as a fashionable Western
aesthetic. Linglong quoted Greta Garbo in 1936 as saying that, ‘Jianmei is our lifeline
and supply of food and clothing . . . The proper sports for me are golf and bicycling’.32
In addition to beautiful faces and artistic talents, jianmei physiques appeared to be
indispensable for success in Hollywood. In the pursuit of a sturdy figure, sport replaced
dieting. In one cartoon, Linglong showed Jean Harlow, Marlene Dietrich, Joan Blondell,
Janet Gaynor and Joan Crawford as representatives of modern feminine beauty. While
the editors admired Dietrich for her ‘lively and mysterious style’, Blondell for her ‘lively
gestures to artists’ taste’, Gaynor for her gentleness and Crawford for her distinctive
sensual beauty, they lauded Harlow as ‘exemplifying jianmei for modern women’. The
central figure of the cartoon, with wide shoulders and long legs, is Blondell who was
depicted as a ‘famous artist’s ideal girl’, but Linglong editors interpreted her as the
anonymous global ‘standard beauty’ that combined the above assets (Figures 2 and 3).
Through the years, Linglong showed numerous Hollywood actresses as ‘Jianmei Stars’.
Horse riding was a popular sport, and many photographs showed actresses jumping
fences on horseback. Starlet Claire Dodd cut a striking pose in riding attire – boots,
loose masculine pants and a wide belt. Other images were more improbable, showing
actresses clad in tight tank tops and shorts or miniskirts but wearing high-heeled sandals
while dancing, hitting tennis balls, bowling, lifting free weights, doing gymnastics,
posing with basketballs or, most oddly, learning to sprint from world-class male runners.
Even demure actresses with slender figures were described as robust athletes.33
Life reformers who accepted eugenics in Weimar racial science and medicine
viewed physical beauty as an indicator of a healthy constitution. A healthy and
beautiful body was characterised by the harmonious and purposeful interactions of its
constituent parts. Ideal health and beauty were promoted as the ‘science of the normal’
that could be manipulated, managed and disciplined through specific measurements.34
Accordingly, Linglong frequently presented absolute (not ‘average’) ‘international’
standards of jianmei in terms of exact measurements. In 1932, it reported that although
the Venus de Milo of Greek antiquity had stood as the norm for jianmei for hundreds of
years, (Western) aesthetics experts had now elected a more beautiful American woman
to replace her. The Venus’s measurements were: 5 feet, 5.5 inches tall, 120 pounds,
with 34.5-inch chest, 5.43-inch wrists, 26-inch waist, 36.5-inch hips, 21.5-inch thighs,
13.4-inch calves and 8-inch ankles.35 In 1934, Linglong reported that an International Beauty Institute (Guoji meirong yuan) had invited representatives from various
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nations to meet every March to adjudicate an annual beauty norm. The institute set the
measurements for a woman’s ‘international standard beauty’ for 1935 to be 5 feet 7
inches tall, 130 pounds, 35-inch chest, 35-inch hips, blond and physically fit. Actress
Mae West met the standard.36 In March 1935, Linglong reported that the institute met
in New York for the Twelfth Beauty Examining Conference, and decided that Miss
1936 should be of ‘small and lilting figure [liuxian xing] without heavy makeup’ to
incorporate naturalness into modern beauty. In addition, ‘the hair was to be at least
two inches long, the wave of hair should not be too thin and the neck should be
revealed’. A twenty-three-year-old dancer who weighed 100 pounds and was around
5 feet tall with natural brown hair was considered a candidate.37 While unequivocally
Western, the standards for jianmei on the pages of Linglong were also fickle and often
contradictory.
‘Translating’ jianmei: discourses of Chinese modernity
When Linglong ‘translated’ and popularised Western, modern categories of jianmei
and tiyu among urban literate women in China, the editors faced an interesting twist
of racial dynamics. The weekly publication viewed Chinese women as lacking jianmei
qualities and lagging behind the jianmei standards of the West. To change this, it
encouraged fashionable Chinese women to relate to the images of Western women and
match ‘international’ (Western) standards. Corresponding to the self-Orientalism in
state discourse that viewed the Chinese as physically weak and sick, Linglong argued
that the women of the ‘Sick Man of Asia’ were, essentially, even weaker. It viewed
Chinese women’s ‘genetically weaker physiques’ as a significant hindrance to gaining
equality with Chinese men and the cause of their inferiority to Western women.
After reporting the standard measurements required for entrants to Miss 1934–36,
Linglong begged, ‘reader sisters, please examine your own weight, height, chest, hips
and waist to see whether they fit the standards of this year or next year’.38 Fitting
the frame of beauty without racial adjustment confirmed the inadequacy of Chinese
women. ‘Our nation’s women can be jian [fit] but not mei [attractive], or mei but not
jian. We do not have the type of jian and mei woman’. The chief editor, Ms Chen,
raised the only dissenting voice in an answer to a nineteen-year-old girl’s question
regarding standard weight. ‘The International Beauty Institute sets standards annually,
but they do not apply to our nation at all because the standards do not make allowances
for differences in race and regions’. Yet the editor followed the pattern and set rough
standards for women of the Chinese nation – 5 feet tall and 130 pounds. Gradually,
though, precise standards dissolved into the rather more vague ‘wide chest’, ‘large
and erect breasts’, ‘high nipples’, ‘ample behind’, ‘slender waist’, ‘even-proportioned
figure’ and ‘strong legs’.39
Although the failures of Chinese female athletes in international games confirmed
the inadequacy of Chinese women, Linglong promoted Chinese athletes as models
and bridges towards the adoption of Western categories of jianmei.40 Their images, in
competition and in standard and fashionable athletic poses, were common. Under the
caption ‘Jianmei Gestures’, female athletes were shown in track events, throwing and
jumping in field events and in ball games.41 Dancing was considered one significant
tiyu activity that linked jianmei with fashion. From 1932, dancers began to wear short
dresses, sleeveless shirts and gym shorts to show their jianmei legs and arms.42 Other
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Figure 2: ‘The poses of the international standard beauties’. The central figure in the
drawing is called the ‘ideal girl’.
Source: Linglong, vol. 5, no. 2, issue 168, 16 January 1935, pp. 98–9. Courtesy of the
C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
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Figure 3: Source: Linglong, vol. 5, no. 2, issue 168, 16 January 1935, pp. 98–9. Courtesy of the C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
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photographs emphasise robust legs. The reader sees, for example, groups of ‘robust
athletes’ in shorts and sneakers crouched to reveal their sturdy figures, highlighting
their legs. Five thick-legged girls from Southeast Tiyu School, who posed with their
left arms tucked behind them and their right arms up, elbows out, with their hands
tucked behind their heads, were labelled as ‘the strongest’ in the Second Shanghai
Middle School Games. In a photograph captioned, ‘The Healthy Legs of Students from
Dongnan’, the camera focused on the legs of a row of girls lying on their bellies while
turning their heads back towards the camera. In the same caption, it was explained that
‘developing jianmei legs needs daily exercise’ (Figure 4).43
Jianmei athletes brought athletic elements into contemporary fashion poses. Under
the caption ‘xiong [grand or masculine] among Women’, the national sprint star Qian
Xingsu appeared with fashionable bobbed hair and a qipao (a modern dress popular
in the Republican era) behind bamboo stalks (Figure 5). Other ‘jianmei athletes’ wore
qipao with numbers on them, just like athletics sweaters, or matched their Western
coats with numbered sweaters. School athletics teams in fashionable dresses deployed
themselves around sporting equipment such as gym bars and basketball hoops under
the label ‘jianmei girls’.44 Athletics outfits were promoted as chic.
The circulation of new images of Chinese female athletes with bobbed hair, T-shirts
and gym shorts in popular magazines promoted the aesthetic concept of jianmei as an
alternative to current urban fashion norms of slender beauty in high heels, qipao and
with perms. Setting regional stereotypes against each other, Linglong called ‘female
compatriots’ from the northern province of Shandong with tanned skin, tall figures and
strong bodies ‘a female army of amazons’, admirable representatives of the jianmei
ideal. Shanghai-style ‘modern girls’ were called on to learn from Shandong girls,
remove their high heels and makeup and dash to the athletics fields.45 Despite the
outstanding performance of Shanghai teams in various games, ‘the pale modern girls’
and mingyuan (young bourgeois ladies of note) from Shanghai were viewed as mere
‘Lin Daiyu-style sickly beauty’, Lin being a depressed and tubercular heroine in the
eighteenth-century novel, Story of the Stone, whose beauty was based on her sickly
weakness.46
Linglong presented the shift to jianmei from the traditional ‘Lin Daiyu-style sickly
beauty’ as ‘scientific’ linear progression. According to editor Chen Zhenling,
Human views of ‘beauty’ evolved with time through education. Due to the restriction of Confucian
morals (lijiao), bound feet and the absence of female exercise, the depressed, sick, thin-faced Lin
Daiyu became the model followed by women and appreciated by men. With time, change, new
expectations for women and the advocacy of publications, jianmei has come to be appreciated and
round-faced women loved.47
In this formulation, weak women in high heels appeared not ‘modern’ but backward
and shameful. An advertisement for Baofeijiao, a medicine for respiratory diseases,
depicted the dangers faced by those in high heels. A slender woman in a short tight skirt,
fitted medium-length coat and high heels, wearing a scarf over her permed hair, held a
handkerchief to her mouth while walking in heavy rain. A hole in the ground before her
warned: ‘beware of falling into the trap of tuberculosis [feilao]’. A strong physique was
now considered the basis for a firm will, noble character, foresight and the great hopes
of modern men and women. Physical training on athletics fields and mental training
were taken as essential requirements for ‘new women’.48 Writer Zhu Yaoxian viewed
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Figure 4: Big and strong legs were emphasised in the concept of jianmei (robust
beauty).
Above: The strongest athletes from Dongnan Girls’ Tiyu School at the Second United
Games of Shanghai Middle Schools
Below: ‘Developing jianmei legs needs daily exercise. Here are the healthy legs of the
students from Dongnan’.
Source: Linglong, vol. 3, no. 14, issue 94, 10 May 1933, p. 604. Courtesy of the
C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
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Figure 5: ‘The national sprint champion, Qian Xingsu: the xiong (grand or masculine)
one among women’.
Source: Linglong, vol. 5, no. 11, issue 177, 27 March 1935, p. 662. Courtesy of the
C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
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the ‘tanned jianmei women jumping and running on the grass-covered athletics fields,
something never before seen’, as evidence of progress. ‘Their determined, enduring and
brave spirits are admired by their weaker sisters and surprised men’. Echoing Chen, one
woman argued that beauty had progressed. Modern women were more beautiful than
those in the past because of ‘progress in clothing’, lively facial expressions influenced
by Western films and, most important, ‘tender figures with even-proportioned muscles’
gained through tiyu.49
Soon, Linglong was presenting jianmei as the ‘general desire of modern women’.
By 1936, Chen Zhenling presented a reader’s letter ‘regarding the key to jianmei’
as ‘a general concern of girls’.50 Linglong’s readers responded enthusiastically and
participated actively in the redefinition and reconstruction of Western jianmei and tiyu
for Chinese women. An editorial in Linglong drew attention from a woman’s face to
her figure by declaring that ‘makeup is deceptive and temporary, but jianmei is selfcultivated and will last until old age if you persist’. ‘Jianmei is not about being big or fat
or using makeup, but having a fit physique, healthy skin colour and lively gestures’.51
Readers, both male and female, and the editors discussed the jianmei of specific
parts of the female body. Most attention was drawn to women’s breasts and legs, which
had never before been considered an important aspect of Chinese feminine beauty.
Whereas male readers framed the discussion around hygiene centred on women’s
weaker physique and reproductive organs, women were mainly concerned with the
aesthetic dimension.52 Editorials and articles offered ‘must-know’ secrets to achieving
jianmei, such as exercise, being worry-free, getting enough sleep and good nutrition,
proper medicine, surgery and books. Western women were cited as models for following these rules. Writers criticised Chinese females for being lazy about hygiene, but
‘fortunately they are beginning to pay attention to the benefits of swimming’.53
Tiyu and jianmei entered into the sensibilities of ordinary urban, literate young
women who were attracted to fashion and being ‘modern’. They were promulgated
as necessary qualities for modern national womanhood, as indicated by the captions
to photographs published in Linglong.54 Here, ordinary women appeared in stadiums
wearing T-shirts, shorts and sneakers, carrying tennis and badminton rackets. Lines of
girls in shorts and T-shirts, lying face down on the ground holding their legs with their
hands, represented pioneering, modern girls who practised bare-handed gymnastics.55
Even fashions such as permed hair, fancy and tight-fitting qipao and high heels, which
were identified with the Lin-Daiyu sickly style, began to be associated with such
sports as swinging, roller skating and miniature golf (Figure 6).56 Women were sorted
into categories according to various standards, such as noble, cute, motherly, funny,
mysterious, masculine, family-oriented, weak or playful, but there was always a tiyurelated category, characterised as ‘active, open and agile’. Plain, short and lightweight
clothing, more or less following men’s styles, was recommended. Long dresses and
‘French-style high heels’ were discouraged for fear of ‘hurting the natural and relaxed
beauty’ of the tiyu style.57
While jianmei promoted by popular magazines such as Linglong became an integral
part of urban femininity, it also penetrated various artistic fields of ‘modern’ popular
culture including photography and cinema. Jianmei justified the depiction of partially
bare female bodies on artistic grounds, deemed free from moral sanction. Nonetheless,
it seems that Chinese models were not readily available for such poses. In the series of
nude photographs published in Linglong, the same model of a slight and unbalanced
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Figure 6: A lady plays miniature golf in the Haibing (beach) Hotel in Shanghai.
Source: Linglong, vol. 4, no. 26, issue 151, 29 August 1934, p. 1684. Courtesy of
the C. V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University.
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figure with a large lower belly and small breasts was used again and again; however, the
photographers portrayed her in imitation of Western themes of bodily expression, and to
experiment with a distinctive image of Chinese or ‘Oriental’ physical beauty. Evoking
an atmosphere of biblical paradise, the model stood, smiling towards the camera, in
front of a willow tree in a lush garden. In ‘Regret’, the model knelt on a piece of stone
topped by a large cross with her head bowed in front. The breasts were emphasised
by specific positioning of the hips, hands and arms. In other photographs, such as
‘Oriental Body Beauty’, ‘Chinese Body Beauty’ or ‘Quiet Beauty’, the same model
was shown presenting traditional Chinese musical instruments in various gestures.58
Although these images had little to do with jianmei, the popularity of jianmei ideals
had altered readers’ expectations to such an extent that they appeared less risqué than
trite.
Athletic jianmei emerged as an integral element of Chinese domestic cinema and
female stardom.59 As physical fitness became an essential requirement for female
beauty rather than a threat to femininity, even the demure Chinese ‘movie queen’ Hu Die
was photographed playing tennis. In contrast, the new trend of physical fitness among
actresses shook the confidence of 1920s popular actress Ruan Lingyu, noted as she
was for her weak beauty, and contributed to her depression and suicide.60 Jianmei and
athletics activities became such popular clichés for depicting Chinese movie actresses
that the magazine commented with sarcasm: ‘female movie stars took athletics activities
as the fashion for the year before last; writing was the fashion last year, and what
about this year?’61 In its ‘Movies’ column, Linglong introduced and commented on
international and domestic films and actors as well as cinema gossip. Approximately
one-third of each issue contained colour illustrations of Hollywood movie stars who
exemplified jianmei physiques, as well as domestic jianmei stars and even fashion
poses of ordinary readers.
What are the implications for constructing femininity of this growing visibility of
women’s bodies in public spaces? Leo Ou-Fan Lee points out the necessity of interpreting mass print culture and cinema through not only the institutional, but also
the social context. He argues that nation as a ‘community’ and ‘modernity’ are both
‘idea and imaginary, both essence and surface’. Focusing on the pictorial magazine
Young Companion, Lee demonstrates that the images and styles in popular newspapers,
novels and periodicals contributed to the rise of a contour of collective sensibilities and
significations in the ‘public sphere’ and conjured up a collective visionary imaginary
of modernity. They ‘do not necessarily enter into the deepest of thought’ and go beyond
the ideological confines of government policy.62
Lee suggests that the publicly displayed ‘modern’ women’s body, either in fancy
dress or nude, played crucial roles in shaping imagined modernity in the public arena
of urban society. Resisting the facile accusation of ‘male gaze and lust, hence leading
to objectification and commodification of the female body’, Lee ponders,
But what if some (even large numbers) of the readers were women? And what if pages of nudes were
placed in the journal together with pictures of Chinese and world leaders, athletes and Hollywood
movie stars? . . . I would argue that the display of the female body had become part of a new public
discourse related to modernity in everyday life.63
Building on Lee’s argument, I wonder what might be the difference if the editors and
contributors of the journal were women? Would the display of the robust female body
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be part of a female-to-female feminist discourse? The answer is evident in the following
episode. It was rumoured that eleven young men led by a certain Ouyang Hai launched
a campaign to select ‘Miss Guangzhou’ by focusing on jianmei thighs – ‘thick, big,
firm, smooth and well-proportioned’.64 Linglong’s female writers quickly condemned
it: ‘beauty selection manipulated by men focuses on sensuality [rougan] and legs for
their pleasure. That is the biggest shame for women, and we are absolutely against
it’. Criticising the ‘Miss Guangzhou’ competition as the ‘thigh beauty’ (datui meiren)
selection, the female writer called on Chinese and foreign sponsors of ‘Miss Shanghai’
to use as criteria of judgement morality, talent and jianmei.65 Female editors had to
tread a thin line when it came to presenting images of healthy athletes, who appear
innocent and almost desexualised. Furthermore, they reiterated that the ideal woman
was an all-around citizen exemplary not only in jianmei physique, but also in morality
and talent.
In sum, in translating an imported ideal of jianmei into a sign of Chinese female
modernity, Linglong played a significant role in the history of modern journalism and
Chinese modernity.
Jianmei and the state
The reception of jianmei took a downwards turn with the advent of the New Life
Movement in 1934, which was in part a response to the national crisis engendered by
Japanese aggression. The Nationalist government sought to impose dress codes, limit
prostitution and in so doing exert ultimate control over women’s bodies. The desire
for healthy female bodies did not diminish, but women wearing leg-baring sports attire
were deemed harmful to public morality. Herein lies a fundamental contradiction in
the discourse of jianmei in the 1930s.
A deeper contradiction lies with the very conditions of China’s desire for modernity.
In order to appear modern, China needed to retain a degree of Western cosmopolitanism; in order to assert its unique identity, China tried to identify national essences
in spirit, morality and culture. Women’s bodies served as the site for the clash of these
two impulses. On the one hand, the Nationalist state wanted to abolish ‘feudal’ and
‘backward’ restrictions on women’s bodies to show progress. On the other hand, the liberation of women’s bodies from state control was attacked as Westernised and harmful
to the traditional moral and spiritual essences advocated in the New Life Movement.66
In theory, tiyu remained a desired national undertaking. The 1929 tiyu law, which
was carried over to the 1930s, addressed the need to fight against traditional attitudes
that would hamper a successful tiyu programme for women. Article 4 stated, ‘all customs that hinder the regular physical growth of young men and young women should
be strictly prohibited by the counties, municipalities, villages and hamlets; and their
programmes should be fixed by the Department of Education and the Training Commissioner’s Department.’67 Although this clause was primarily directed at the prevalent
rural customs of breast-binding and footbinding, it was instrumentalised in quite other
ways.68
The official discourse on jianmei during the New Life Movement was overwhelmingly negative, lumped with skin-revealing ‘Western’ dress and even prostitution. The
attire of ‘modern girls’ as evinced by calendar models and movie stars – heavy makeup,
permed hair, fancy clothes and high heels – was labelled as ‘bizarre dress’ (qizhuang
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yifu) harmful to morals and was banned. In June 1936, the Nationalist government
deemed it illegal for women to wear extravagant clothes and permed hair. Jiang Jieshi
instructed officers on the streets to enforce the law by accompanying violators to their
homes to change their clothes, and by jailing and fining those who resisted. As a result,
fewer modern fashionable women were seen in public. When the actress Huang Jing
arrived by boat in Chongqing in a Western dress revealing part of her breasts, soldiers
stopped her at the pier and told her to go back to the boat to change. Since her luggage
had already been sent to the hotel, she had to borrow clothes from a servant before being
allowed to land.69 The Nationalist government went as far as launching a ‘hair-tying
movement’, promoting the traditional ji (a bun on the back of the head). On 21 January
1935, the Nanchang Military Headquarters ruled that soldiers could not marry women
without ji. A clause was added to the New Life Movement rules, discouraging women
from wearing their hair loose, bobbed or permed.
Local authorities responded to the central state’s directives in various ways. The
municipal authority of Hangzhou and one governor, Huang Shaohong, banned permed
hair as the first step in enforcing the New Life Movement, because women in their
territories travelled to Shanghai and spent large amounts of money on permanent waves.
The leaders of Shanghai women’s circles advocated that the ji was preferable to haircutting in terms of cost, time and even natural beauty. The Shanghai Girls’ Middle
School, the private Peiming Girls’ Middle School and women’s groups in Ji’nan, Daxia
and Fudan Universities proposed organising an Alliance of Female Students for Long
Hair (Nüxuesheng xufa da tongmeng) to dissuade students from cutting their hair. The
Educational Bureau of Guangdong drafted strict dress codes banning female students
from permanent waves, makeup, high heels or jewellery such as diamond rings or
bracelets.70 Urban young men in various cities (particularly Hangzhou, Nanjing and
Tianjin) voluntarily organised ‘modern fashion destruction troupes’ (modeng pohuai
tuan) with strong fascist overtones to enforce violently the state bans in public spaces.71
The banning of ‘bizarre dress’ went hand in hand with the promotion of a plain style
that formed the basis of an alternative jianmei image of healthy womanhood.72 This
alternative image was welcome to many urban women and men who were disenchanted
with what they deemed as excessive Westernisation. As early as 1931, some literate
urban women attempted to legitimise an alternative image of ‘new women’ based
on tiyu and jianmei, as opposed to the ‘modern girls’ identified with heavy makeup
and fancy clothes. Gradually, jianmei and ‘bizarre dress’ became opposite sides of
a dichotomy in the New Life Movement. Female educators such as Cao Xiuling, a
Wuben Women’s School graduate and teacher at Huifen Women’s School in Shanghai,
advocated disciplining the disgraceful and superficial fake ‘new women’ and ‘modern’
beauty marked by attractive clothes or foreign creams or powders, and creating authentic
ones through tiyu and jianmei. While ‘modern girls’ were labelled ‘flower vases’ and
‘playthings’, a writer in Linglong suggested using ‘girl of this age’ or ‘girl of today’ for
the ‘real new/modern woman’ who had a clever brain, the ambition to fight for great
causes and, most important, a jianmei physique.73
Like some in the German life reform movement, the New Life Movement presented
fancy appearance as foreign and corrupt, associated with gender mixing in entertainment venues and the decline of women’s purity and morals, while it viewed clean,
simple and practical clothing as indigenous, culturally authentic, moral and identified
with motherhood in a domestic sphere.74 Tiyu was prescribed as treatment of this fancy
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appearance. Linglong reported that ‘different nations hold different views on women’s
jianmei and status. Some respect women’s dignity [renge], while others take women
as playthings and women’s dress styles are influenced consequently’.
But how far Linglong raised voices in opposition to those that wanted to close down
the choices available to women about how they looked and what national style they
represented, is ambiguous. One contributor described how Germany had lost its original
national character and united spirit after its women’s clothing styles became fancy and
colourful as a result of ‘bad’ influences from southern Europe. In order to pursue
motherhood, it was said that German women abandoned exotic and fancy clothes in
favour of hygienic and artistic clothing. Furthermore, it criticised Japanese women for
their lewd overuse of face powder while admiring the German Nazi party’s banning
of women with makeup in its political meetings.75 An editorial explicitly condemned
female ‘bizarre dress’ in China as having been influenced by evil, extravagant Western
customs.76 Indulgence in social life, fancy clothes and hedonism were criticised as
the wrong direction for Chinese women, who had only recently gained freedom after
the May Fourth Movement had advocated wholesale Westernisation.77 In this way, the
anti-fashion proposal in Linglong was a veiled discourse for the superiority of Chinese
culture and morality. This claim, however, rings hollow because both the terms and
standards of judgement were Western.
Of the various ways to abolish women’s ‘bizarre dress’, the most commonly used was
to identify it with prostitution.78 It is in this area that the state’s attempted control over
women’s bodies reached extreme proportions. The Shanghai Provincial Police Bureau
Zhou Quanchu ordered prostitutes with fashionable clothes and modern makeup to wear
a badge shaped like a peach flower in order to distinguish them from ladies and female
students from good families. The strategy was tried in Hankou and Nanjing as well.
Prostitutes resisted having to wear the badges by hiding them inside their clothes or
underneath large scarves, so the authorities established follow-up policies. The Public
Safety Department in Hankou proposed to the city government that specific areas be
reserved for prostitutes, who were at the time living throughout the city. Gradually, the
peach-flower badge requirement was replaced by permed hair and high heels. Shanxi
province ordered prostitutes to wear high heels and permed hair, or be punished as
illegal secret prostitutes. On 1 May 1935, prostitutes in Taiyuan were ordered to start
wearing the badges, permed hair and high heels.79 The former fashionable attire of
urban modern girls became unequivocally associated with degraded womanhood.
Patriotic, pure and moral womanhood cultivated by tiyu and jianmei cut a visual
contrast with decadent figures in the pleasure quarters. In a photograph series entitled
‘South and North Poles’, fancy-looking prostitutes posed near a door. Female members
of a Chinese hiking team (Zhonghua buxing tuan) with short hair, plain T-shirts and
qipao were presented in contrast. The team was said to have walked for two years and
to be planning to walk for eight more, investigating the situations of citizens across
the nation.80 Since mothers and wives fulfilled their patriotic obligations by raising
their families, women in pleasure quarters were expected to be reformed into patriotic
citizens through serving in combat or helping mothers and wives with household work.
The precondition was training their will and dignity through tiyu and military drills.81
In the capital, Nanjing, singers were similarly trained as part of the New Life Movement and were organised into first-aid teams in preparation for war. In 1934, after
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someone cut the fashionable clothes of a ‘modern girl’ as she crossed Taiping Road,
popular singers in the Qinhuai area (a traditional pleasure quarter) were scared into
wearing the plain clothes of ‘national products’ with little or no jewellery. The singers,
to reinforce their new image of ‘cherishing youth, having a sense of shame and fostering the New Life Movement’, reduced their time for socialisation and exercised
every morning by riding bikes and doing breathing exercises.82 A female correspondent to Linglong founded the School for Women of the Pleasure Quarters (Jiaofang
nüzi minzhong xueshe), which charged only one yuan for registration. Tiyu was a significant part of the curriculum, along with general academic education, proper morals
for women (fudao) and domestic training.83
However, urban literate women were not satisfied with the anti-prostitution drive
of the Nationalist government. Some opposed the authorities’ association of ‘bizarre
appearance’ with prostitutes and the plain jianmei style with ‘women of good family’.
The Women’s Progressive Association (Funü xiejin hui) of Taiyuan asked the city to
rescind the order that prostitutes wear high heels and permed hair. They feared that
glamour would become the privilege of prostitutes and that women of ‘good families’ supporting the New Life Movement would lose control in the domestic power
balance, jeopardising family and social stability.84 Concerned with the dignity of prostitutes as women and with their potential virtues, as exemplified by historical legendary
prostitutes whose stories centred on courage and patriotism, some women writers for
Linglong called on ‘the gentlemen in authority’ to be ‘generous, tolerant and more
careful about their attitude’. They called on social forces including education rather
than state power to persuade women to adopt a jianmei plain style.85
One 1936 editorial in Linglong went as far as to advocate the decoupling of women’s
hairstyle and morality, hence returning the agency of self-fashioning to the women,
prostitutes included. This editorial argued that hairstyles as mere decoration should not
be controlled or manipulated by men. ‘Perming, cutting or keeping their hair long are
women’s personal freedoms, and have nothing to do with so-called moral questions’.
‘Do they not know that the officially sanctioned ji-chignons can be as costly and
sensuous [as permed hair]? So, women’s problems will never be solved until women
themselves are involved’. Some women called for a ban on the sensuous styles of the
chignons; progressive women were to cut their hair in the interests of gender equality,
modernisation and civilisation.86 The plain jianmei style fitted perfectly with the image
of the virtuous and patriotic ‘new woman’ and therefore had a broad appeal in a period
of ‘national crisis’.
State and journalistic discourses on dress and the anxiety of modernity took the most
radical form in a concerted attack on the exposure in public of bare female skin. By
order of Mayor Yuan Liang, the Beiping Social and Public Safety Bureaux made it
illegal to reveal female legs and feet unless performing manual labour. Qipao hemlines
were required to be within one inch of the top of the foot, the sleeves down to the
elbow, the collar one-and-a-half inches high and the side splits no more than three
inches above the knee. Short tops were to cover the belt loops and be worn with skirts.
Knitted short tops without buttons were banned. Trousers had to be worn with tops that
were loose around the waist and that covered three inches of the seat. The shortest pants
had to extend four inches below the knee. Walking on the street in pyjamas, slippers
or bare feet was banned. Female government employees, teachers and students, and
female dependants of male government employees were ordered to begin following
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the law within half a month, and other women within one month. Policemen on duty
were responsible for enforcing the law and violators were to be detained and punished.
The order was printed and distributed to households by the Public Safety Bureau. The
local government of Xi County in Anhui punished men with bare arms and women
showing their chests with one day of manual labour to enforce the rules of the New
Life Movement.87
Besides regulating the length and shape of women’s clothing, the authorities instituted a series of gender segregation measures to counter the liberatory threats brought
about by the display of women’s bare skin. The Guangdong Political Research Association (Zhengzhi yanjiu hui) banned men and women – including those from official
families – from swimming, walking, travelling, eating and living together outside the
home. Theatres were not to show movies performed by both men and women (actors
would play the roles of the opposite gender). In order to ban co-education, Beiping
Mayor Yuan Liang ordered Social and Public Safety Bureaux to recruit and help contractors build women’s dormitories in various districts.88
The official fear of exposed female skin in public was symptomatic of a larger
anxiety about the visibility of women in city streets and new urban professions. This
attitude was widely shared among the urban population, as evinced by an essay in
Linglong by a male contributor who contended that the massive numbers of women
seeking economic opportunities in cities were transformed into ‘abnormal “modern
girls” who abandoned family, chastity, friendship and honesty – enjoying pleasure
without restriction’. In support of his argument, the writer paraphrased an article with
a similar tone from the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun, called ‘Chinese Modern
Women and Women’s Education’. The journalist’s solution was ‘to return to ancient
ideas and respect traditions, banning men and women from walking together, and
women from revealing their legs or feet’.89
But the Nationalist state had to maintain a delicate balance in order to discipline and
exert control over women’s bodies. On the one hand, they sought to liberate women
from traditional restrictions and to bring them up as healthy citizens. On the other hand,
they invented a spiritual ‘national essence’ to curb the liberating trend brought about
by the new fashions in the media and public culture. Within this context, bare skin
was no longer an expression of the desirable jianmei style associated with tiyu but was
instead construed as the most bizarre of all appearances. The campaign against bare
skin in public represented the most draconian measure of the Nationalist state’s attempt
to control women’s bodies.
Official discourse did not remain unchallenged. Although a 1934 editorial in Linglong called upon youth to obey the official ban on bare skin and mixed-gender social
activities, female authors in Linglong, who viewed these bans as ‘hostile’, ‘insulting’
and ‘hysterical’ with ‘anger’ and ‘shame’,90 defended bare-skin fashions and jianmei
in their own discourses of civilisation.
Resistance from urban writers
We have seen that the New Life Movement promoted Confucian morals as Chinese
national essence and rejected jianmei bare skin as an example of Western material
civilisation. However, the flip side of timeless ‘national essence’ is stagnation and
backwardness. The defenders of bare skin played up this underside: ‘it seems that every
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barbarian nation has, or had, a tendency to regulate women’s appearance and segregate
genders to enforce morality’. Using a liberal progressive logic, they attacked the New
Life Movement ban as ‘going against the trend of history’ and asked rhetorically,
‘should China keep pace with the currents of the time or return to the ancient barbaric
convention of locking women at home?’ During the opening ceremony of the North
China Games on the morning of the national day in 1934, Madam Yu Xuezhong, who
had bound feet, was invited to cut the ribbon. People laughed that ‘maybe female
athletes with bare chests and legs betrayed the New Life Movement. Madam Yu . . .
with her bound feet . . . may fit the New Life Movement better!’91
One powerful critique of the official obsession with bare skin took the form of
advocacy for female livelihood. ‘In order to relieve the “national crisis”, the New Life
Movement should shift attention to economic development and national defence’, wrote
one contributor. Under the pseudonym ‘A Rural Woman in Shanxi Province’, the author
called attention to rural poverty – the root cause that deprived girls of clothing. ‘We
fifteen- or sixteen-year-old girls in the countryside work in the cold fields with bare
feet and legs because we do not have money to buy trousers and shoes. But the officials
and moral defenders in urban social and public safety bureaux ignore our needs and
only focus on abolishing bare legs and feet’.92
Others resisted by deploying the authority of science. In 1934, for example, the
Beiping Women’s Association (Funü hui) argued that bare feet and legs should not
be banned because, according to medical science, it was hygienic to reveal the legs
and feet during the hot summer, allowing the sun to kill germs and reduce disease.93
Several Linglong authors echoed this argument by stating that women whose legs were
covered with long trousers tended to become emaciated.94
This might also have been because they were not following what was presented as
a natural impulse in Western societies in the form of nudism. While the naked body,
and especially the Western Classical male nude body, took on numerous meanings
according to who was promoting it in early twentieth-century Europe, its promoters
in Linglong narrated the rise and fall of Roman and Greek history in terms of the
appreciation of the beauty and strength of the male body, and stated that the Greek
legacy of appreciating the innocent beauty of the body was reborn in the modern arts.95
Nudism and the North American and European ‘nudist movement’ (luoti shenghuo
yundong) – discussed at length in Linglong – were, moreover, regarded as entirely
natural, and associated with freedom from sexual connotations. Linglong believed
that the movement originated in Germany where, it said, because of the popularity of
naturalism, the human body and sexual liaisons between men and women were not
viewed as ‘shameful’ or ‘mysterious’. Under the heading ‘Glimpses of German Nudist
Life’, the editors of Linglong introduced a series of photographs featuring individuals,
couples, families and groups of various ages and gender, with outdoor athletics activities
as the most common theme. Large nude women were shown in various poses, climbing
cliffs and sitting or standing in the mountains.96
Linglong described the nudist movement as universal and lasting. The nudist organisation in the Finnish capital, for example, was commended for its strict regulations;
only those who were strong and free of disease were qualified and members were required to take an oath to join. Males and females supervised each other to make sure
that no one fell into romantic relationships; non-family members were not allowed to
kiss.97 The nudist movement in the United States, in turn, appeared institutionalised,
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commercial and fashionable. According to a newspaper article, 100 nudists gathered in
a 700-acre ‘nudist yard’ in San Diego to exhibit the pleasure of bareness to visitors. Its
‘nudist queen’, a beautiful twenty-two-year-old girl, announced that she would travel
to New York to carry on her ‘natural life’ there. Her harmonious and loving family
life (five of her ten siblings were believers in nudism) was emphasised to highlight
the moral correctness of her actions.98 Nudism, it was concluded, reduced the mystery
of the human body and improved morals and happiness.99 Besides progressive trends
from the West, defenders of naturalism also called attention to ‘primitive’ minorities
who, like innocent children, were construed as effortless practitioners of naturalism
with physical strength and beauty. A translated German book, Declined Civilisation
(probably Oswald Spengler’s The Decline of the West), was cited as stating that natural human bodies with developed muscles and shiny skin exercised in the sun, cold
water and air, were healthy, authentic and moral, as shown by ‘primitive’ societies.100
Similarly, women of Tibet, Hainan Island and the Yao ethnic group in China were
admired for enjoying bare-skinned customs, strong physiques, positive gender roles
and free romantic relations in their simple and natural lives.101 The counter-discourse
of urban writers against the official ban on bare skin thus took the form of a discourse
of civilisation and barbarianism, which was fraught with ambiguities.
In conclusion, when the Western modern concept of jianmei was transformed and
promoted among urban Chinese women as fashion during the ‘national crisis’, its meanings shifted constantly within various contexts – as modern tiyu, as morally threatening
bare skin and as progressive naturalism. Linglong demonstrated that China participated
in the global media – news and trends from Europe travelled quickly – and that Chinese modernity was constructed from Western ideas and motifs, in a discursive field
dominated by the West. Jianmei, like Chinese modernity, was the result of cultural
translation. Yet resourceful editors and readers found a space to critique both the West,
in the form of Nazism, and the nationalistic state, in the form of the New Life Movement. In this we see the ‘feminism’ of Linglong and the jianmei discourse it helped to
popularise.
Notes
I wish to acknowledge various scholars in the conceiving, researching and writing of this article, including
Steven Vlastos, Linda Kerber, Charles Hayford, Catriona Parratt, Eric Allina-Pisano and Rebecca Costello.
Prof. R. David Arkush of the University of Iowa directed the dissertation from which the article is drawn.
Much credit is owed to the two anonymous reviewers whose suggestions greatly improved the article. Erik
Huneke of Gender & History handled the production with patience and skill. Thanks to my husband and best
friend Graham Russell Gao Hodges and my family in Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang, China for their constant
encouragement and support. My greatest debts are to Dorothy Ko and Wang Zheng.
1. For example, Chinese women’s bound feet once symbolised Chinese masculine power and control through
related patriarchal values such as erotic sexuality, dependence and obedience. In imperialist narratives,
victimised, footbound women were transformed into a symbol of the backwardness and barbarity of
the already effeminate ‘Sick Man of Asia’. For subtle values and meanings involved in footbinding, see
Dorothy Ko, Cinderella’s Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 2005).
2. When Western ‘sport’, ‘physical education’ and ‘physical culture’ were translated into Chinese as tiyu,
their imported meanings were adapted to local understandings and needs within institutional discourse
in the national context of state-building. Therefore, when tiyu finally gained fixed meaning during the
‘national crisis’, it involved not only Western sport, physical education and physical culture stressing
hygienic therapies, but also ancient and folk forms of Chinese physical activities such as martial arts,
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
strategic chess, qigong, mountain climbing, boating and military activities. For more discussion of tiyu,
see Susan Brownell, Training the Body for China: Sports in the Moral Order of the People’s Republic
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995), pp. 16–17; Andrew Morris, Marrow of the Nation: A History
of Sport and Physical Culture in Republican China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004),
pp. 1–4, 12–13, 16, 31, 71–2, 75–6; Yunxiang Gao, ‘Sports, Gender, and Nation State during China’s
“National Crisis” from 1931 to 1945’ (unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Iowa, 2005), pp. 1–4.
Prasenjit Duara, ‘The Regime of Authenticity: Timelessness, Gender, and National History in Modern
China’, History and Theory 37 (1998), pp. 287–308.
Prasenjit Duara, Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern (New York:
Rowman & Littlefield, 2003), p. 142.
Duara, Sovereignty and Authenticity, p. 152.
Zhonghua Minguo ershier nian quanguo yundong dahui zongbaogao shu (Shanghai: Zhonghua shuju,
1934), Section 2, pp. 3–4.
Life reformers disagreed on the means to achieve a healthy and beautiful physique. Some condemned
competitive sport as one-sided and only focused on physical culture. See Julia L. Foulkes, Modern Bodies:
Dance and American Modernism from Martha Graham to Alvin Ailey (Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 2002), pp. 86, 206, n. 65; Michael Hau, The Cult of Life and Beauty in Germany: A Social
History, 1890–1930 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), pp. 1–2, 179; George L. Mosse, Image
of Man: The Creation of Modern Masculinity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 95; George
Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality: Respectability and Abnormal Sexuality in Modern Europe (New York:
Howard Fertig, 1985), pp. 47, 57. For one theory on the origins of the term ‘physical culture’, see Susan
Brownell, ‘Thinking Dangerously: The Person and his Ideas’, in John Bale and Chris Philo (eds), Body
Cultures: Essays on Sport, Space & Identity by Henning Eichberg (London: Routledge, 1998), pp. 22–46,
here p. 41. Henning Eichberg, ‘New Spatial Configurations of Sport? Experiences from Danish Alternative
Planning’, in Bale and Philo (eds), Body Cultures, pp. 68–83.
See Hau, Cult of Life and Beauty in Germany, pp. 1–3, 4–8, 32, 199, 201–2; Foulkes, Modern Bodies,
p. 206, n. 65; Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, pp. 51, 59–60, 129, 178.
John Bale and Chris Philo, ‘Introduction: Henning Eichberg, Space, Identity, and Body Culture’, in Bale
and Philo (eds), Body Cultures, pp. 5, 8.
Fan Hong, Footbinding, Feminism and Freedom: The Liberation of Women’s Bodies in Modern China
(London: Frank Cass, 1997); Morris, Marrow of the Nation, p. 5. You Jianming, ‘Jindai Huadong diqu de
nü qiuyuan (1927–1937)’, Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindai shi yanjiusuo jikan, 32 (1999), pp. 57–125, here
p. 59; ‘Jindai nüzi tiyu guan chutan’, Xin shixue 7 (December 1996), pp. 119–58.
Duara, Sovereignty and Authenticity, pp. 133, 141.
Hau, Cult of Life and Beauty in Germany, pp. 2, 178; Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, p. 10.
Leo Ou-Fan Lee, Shanghai Modern: The Flowering of a New Urban Culture in China 1930–1945 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999), pp. 64, 67.
The thirteen in Shanghai included Women’s Daily, the weekly Linglong, biweekly Women’s Voice and
Women’s Pictorial, the monthly Women (Nüzi), Modern Women (Xiandai funü), Women Youth (Nü qingnian), Nüduo, New Family and Modern Parents, Woman and Family, a periodic supplement to the daily
Morning News (Chenbao), the weekly Modern Domestic Affairs supplement to Xinbao and the ‘Woman
and Family’ column in Oriental Magazine (Dongfang zazhi). The four in Beiping included New Women
(Xin funü), a periodic supplement to North China Daily, the weekly Women and Youth (Funü qingnian) in
the daily Morning News (Chenbao), Women Weekly (Funü zhoukan), a supplement to World Daily (Shijie
ribao), and the weekly Family Paradise, a supplement to the Morning News. The two in Hong Kong included the monthly Modern Women (Dangdai funü) and Women’s Weekly, a supplement to Oriental Daily.
Nanjing had the monthly Women’s Shared Voice (Funü gongming), Hangzhou had the every-ten-day Funü
xunkan, Zhengzhou had Women’s Weekly, a supplement to Zhengzhou Daily, and Tianjin had the weekly
Family. Linglong 100, 21 June 1933, p. 964.
Linglong 58, 13 July 1932, p. 375.
Linglong 94, 10 May 1933, pp. 574, 602–3.
Linglong 128, 17 January 1934, pp. 157–64.
Linglong 186, 5 June 1935, pp. 1295, 1274. The company headquarters enjoyed a prestigious address at
56 Nanjing Road, Shanghai.
The estimated monthly social expenses including movies for an average dance hostess in Shanghai was
twenty Chinese yuan. One yuan equalled 100 copper coins. This confirms Lee’s assertion that books in
the 1920s and 1930s were relatively cheap in order to promote new culture and education for those who
could not afford to go to school. Lee, Shanghai Modern, pp. 27, 47.
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20. ‘Benshe qishi’, Linglong 234, 29 April 1936, pp.1224–5; 232, 24 June 1936, pp. 1056–7.
21. ‘Bianji zhe yan’, Linglong 196, 7 October 1935, p. 1985. The famous writer Zhang Ailing (Eileen Chang)
stated that every female student in the 1930s read Linglong. Zhang Ailing, ‘Tan nüren’, in Zhang Ailing
dianchang wenji (Harbin: Harbin Publishing House, 2005), vol. 4, p. 64.
22. ‘Yi jiu san qi nian dui funü jie de xiwang’, Linglong 268, 6 January 1937, pp. 5–8.
23. The term nüquan (women’s rights/power) first entered public discourse when reformers began to address
the ‘women problem’ for national strengthening after China’s defeat in the Sino–Japanese war in 1895.
See Mizuyo Sudo’s article in this volume. In the May Fourth period (1915–25), Chinese terms including
nüzi zhuyi (female-ism), nüxing zhuyi (feminine-ism), funü zhuyi (womanism), nüquan zhuyi (the ism of
women’s rights) and fumineishimu (feminism) appeared to ‘grasp the complexity of Western feminism’.
Wang Zheng, ‘Feminism: China’, in Cheris Kramarae and Dale Spender (eds), Routledge International
Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women’s Issues and Knowledge, vol. 2 (New York: Routledge, 2000),
pp. 736–7.
24. Linglong 81, 11 January 1933, p. 22.
25. Nora became a familiar symbolic figure after Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House was translated into Chinese
in the May Fourth Movement as part of the discussion of ‘women’s questions’.
26. ‘Guoji funü menhu kaifang liangmeng dahui’, Linglong 133, 21 March 1934, pp. 455–6; ‘Xianqi liangmu
de xinxing’, Linglong 159, 31 October 1934, pp. 2163–6; ‘Shijie funü de eyun’, Linglong 182, 8 May
1935, pp. 905–6; Pingzi, ‘Deguo xianqi liangmu xunlian shuo’, Linglong 283, 28 April 1937, pp. 1270–72;
Shi Minyu, ‘Xitele dui deguo funü de qiwang’, Linglong 128, 17 January 1934, pp. 131–4; ‘Ducai xia de
funü’, Linglong 148, 25 July 1934, pp. 1451–2.
27. Linglong 104, 26 July 1933, p. 1216.
28. Moli, ‘Yundong yu Zhongguo’, Linglong 1, 18 March 1931, pp. 24–5; 41, 22 December 1931, p. 1631;
58, 13 July 1932, pp. 360–61; 61, 3 August 1932, p. 527; 78, 14 December 1932, p. 1326; 88, 22 March
1933, pp. 362–3; 89, 29 March 1933, pp. 308–9.
29. See Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, pp. 48, 50–53, 139, illustration 16 between pp. 96–7.
30. Linglong 29, 30 September 1931, pp. 1076–7; 35, 11 November 1931, p. 1368; 183, 15 May 1935,
pp. 997–9; 191, 3 July 1935, p. 1527.
31. ‘Mosuolini chang jianmei’, Linglong 91, 12 April 1933, p. 405. See also Mosse, Image of Man, p. 95;
Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, pp. 48–65 on the integration of the cult of the physique into Nazi and
Fascist ideology.
32. Whether Mussolini and Garbo had actually made these remarks is beside the point. What is significant
here is the way the Linglong writers used the influential Western figures in their efforts to popularise the
translated concept of jianmei.
33. Linglong 10, 20 May 1931, pp. 352, 359; 27, 15 September 1931, p. 1011; 52, 2 June 1932, p. 77; 62, 10 August 1932, pp. 552–3; 67, 14 September 1932, p. 797; ‘Nü yundong jia de mingxing’, Linglong 102, 12 July
1933, p. 1134; 148, 25 July 1934, pp. 1484, 1494; 162, 28 November 1934, p. 2398; 172, 20 February 1935,
pp. 352–3; 183, 15 May 1935, pp. 997–8; ‘Shijie biaozhun meiren zhaoxing’, Linglong 168, 16 January
1935, pp. 98–9; ‘Gelantai Jiabao de huazhuang tan’, Linglong 264, 1936, pp. 3683–4; ‘Jianshen yundong’,
Linglong 283, 28 April 1937, pp. 1205–6.
34. Hau, Cult of Life and Beauty in Germany, pp. 6–7, 32–44, 183.
35. ‘Jianmei de biaozhun’, Linglong 74, 16 November 1932, p. 1112.
36. ‘Weilai zhi guoji biaozhun meiren’, Linglong 150, 15 August 1934, p. 1589.
37. ‘Yi jiu san liu nian de tiaojie’, Linglong 196, 7 October 1935, pp. 1941–2.
38. Linglong 181, 1 May 1935, p. 846.
39. Linglong 39, 9 December 1931, p. 1534; ‘Biaozhun de tige’, Linglong 229, 10 June 1936, p. 805–6;
‘Shaonü men de qieshen wenti, zhenyang shi shenti jianmei’, Linglong 136, 11 April 1934, pp. 645–7.
40. None of the five female athletes who participated in the Berlin Olympics in 1936 was taller than 1.60 m
or weighed more than 55 kilos. It was argued that the ‘disadvantage in natural physique’, in addition to
‘inactive advocacy, incomplete measures and poor organisation’ were attributed to ‘the limitation that only
two women participated [in competition], and they did not win anything’. Li Sen (1.58m, 55kg), Yang
Xiuqiong (1.57m, 52kg), Zhai Lianyuan (1.56m, 53kg), Fu Shunyun (1.60m, 54kg), Liu Yuhua (1.55m,
54kg). Zhonghua tiyu xiejing hui [China National Amateur Athletic Federation] (ed.), Chuxi di shiyi jie
shijie yundong hui Zhonghua daibiao tuan baogao (Shanghai: 1937), part 1, pp. 56–8. Linling, ‘Canjia
shijie yundong hui tandao woguo nüzi tiyu shifou jinbu’, Linglong 262, 18 November 1936, pp. 3488–9.
41. In photographs of short-haired women leaping over hurdles, the camera focused on their well-muscled legs.
At the finish line one sees the dashing winner’s outstretched arms and twisted, gasping facial expression.
In the javelin and shot-put competition, images depicted the power of muscles with the body leaning far
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42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
backwards. Photos singled out individual ball players for their aggressive gestures under the label jianjiang
(robust athletes). High-jumpers going over the pole were shot from above with the audience, dwarfed, on
the other side looking up into the sky at the athletes. Linglong 28, 23 September 1931, p. 1028; 52, 1 June
1932, 76; 85, 15 February 1933, pp. 216–17; 94, 10 May 1933, p. 601; 168, 16 January 1935, pp. 96–7;
189, 26 June 1935, p. 1399; 217, 1935, p. 4223.
Linglong 51, 25 June 1932, pp. 24–5; 56, 29 June 1932, p. 265; 61, 3 August 1932, p. 508; 95, 17 May
1933, pp. 662–3; 159, 31 October 1934, pp. 2192–3.
Linglong 28, 23 September 1931, pp. 1018, 1024, 1026, 1047; 72, 26 October 1932, pp. 1032–3; 94, 10
May 1933, p. 604; 127, 10 January 1934, p. 84; 135, 4 April 1934, p. 578; 145, 25 April 1934, p. 1252;
161, 21 November 1934, pp. 2318–19; 168, 16 January 1935, pp. 96–7; 186, 5 June 1935, pp. 1238–9;
189, 26 June 1935, pp. 1398–9; 242, 24 June 1936, p. 1839.
Linglong 63, 17 August 1932, p. 599; 97, 31 May 1933, p. 780; 89, 29 March 1933, p. 307; 101, 5 July
1933, p. 1041; 134, 18 March 1934, p. 543; 161, 21 November 1934, pp. 2318–19; 169, 23 January 1935,
p. 158; 172, 20 February 1935, p. 322; 174, 6 March 1935, p. 450; 171, 6 February 1935, p. 276; 173,
27 February 1935, p. 415; 177, 27 March 1935, p. 662; 182, 8 May 1935, p. 912; 194, 24 July 1935, p.
1767; 284, 5 May 1937, p. 1302. For qipao, see Antonia Finanne, ‘What Should Chinese Women Wear? A
National Problem’, in Antonia Finanne and Anne McLaren (eds), Dress, Sex and Text in Chinese Culture
(Clayton, Australia: Monash Asia Institute, 1999), pp. 3–36.
Linglong 71, 19 October 1932, p. 1006.
Cao Xueqin (1717–63), Honglou meng.
Zhenling, ‘Xiandai nanzi dui nüxing mei muguang zhi zhuanyi’, Linglong 95, 17 May 1933, pp. 635–7.
Quanyunhui teji (Shanghai: Tiyu shenghuo chuban she, 1948), p. 56. Miss Peifang, ‘Xin nüxing de liangda
xunlian’, Linglong 76, 30 November 1932, pp. 1203–4. Feisi, ‘Zhe shidao xuyao na yi zhong nüxing?’
Linglong 259, 28 October 1936, pp. 3256–8.
Zhu Yaoxian, ‘Cong nüzi tiyu kandao nüzi jianglai de mingyun’, Linglong 94, 10 May 1933, pp. 575–6;
Shen Yixiang, ‘Xiandai funü heyi bi congqian funü haokan’, Linglong 25, 2 September 1931, pp. 901–2.
‘Mianbu taishou bujiu fa’, Linglong 104, 26 July 1933, p. 1216; ‘Shaonü men de gieshen wenti, zenyang
shi shenti jianmei’, Linglong 136, 11 April 1934, pp. 645–7.
Zhenling, ‘Xiandai nanzi dui nüxing mei muguang zhi zhuanyi’, Linglong 95, 17 May 1933, pp. 635–7;
‘Haolaiwu nüxing de jianshen meirong shu’, Linglong 148, 25 July 1934, p. 1489.
See Gao, ‘Sports, Gender, and Nation-State’, pp. 307–10 for the rich literature discussing jianmei of
specific parts of the female body by Linglong’s male and female readers and editors.
Zhang Guiqin, ‘Wo de jianshen shu’, Linglong 7, 29 April 1931, pp. 221–2; Ping’er, ‘Jiaozheng zitai’,
Linglong 30, 10 October 1931, p. 1152; 25, 2 September 1931, pp. 927–9; Miss Liu Meiying, ‘Jianbian de
jianshen shu’, 29, 30 September 1931, p. 1073; ‘Weisheng guicheng’, Linglong 59, 20 July 1932, p. 399;
Aimei, ‘Huanfei yanshou ruhe shizhong’, Linglong 232, 24 June 1936, pp. 1051–3; Miss Shi Yunfang, ‘Tan
jianmei de tujing’, Linglong 241, 17 June 1936, pp. 1734–7; ‘Jianbian er youxiao de jianmei fa’, Linglong
258, 21 October 1936, pp. 3203–4; Miss Liuying, ‘Shouren zeng fei fa’, Linglong 261, 11 November
1936, pp. 3443–7.
Linglong 42, 1 January 1932, p. 1652; 43, 13 January 1932, p. 1719; 50, 18 May 1932, p. 2054; 73, 9
November 1932, p. 1058.
Linglong 40, 16 December 1931, p. 1580; 68, 21 September 1932, p. 841; 137, 18 April 1934, p. 733;
145, 25 April 1934, p. 1250; 179, 10 April 1935, p. 728.
Linglong 39, 9 December 1931, p. 1530; 151, 29 August 1934, p. 1684; 182, 8 May 1935, p. 921; 184, 22
May 1935, cover.
He Jing’an, ‘Funü caiyi shi ying zhuyi zhi yaodian’, Linglong 192, 3 July 1935, p. 1619.
Linglong 43, 21 November 1932, p. 1724; 51, 25 May 1932, p. 23; 61, 3 August 1932, p. 507; 66,
7 September 1932, p. 767; 68, 21 September 1932, p. 845; 69, 5 October 1932, p. 894; 78, 14 December
1932, p. 1323; 100, 21 June 1933, p. 974; 107, 23 August 1933, p. 1442; 155, 3 October 1934, p. 1967;
174, 6 March 1935, pp. 480–81.
In 1935, the Film Star Photograph Company (Yingxing zhaopian she), based in central Shanghai, released
a special jianmei issue for its mass circulation series, Album of Stars, with each volume selling for
0.2 yuan. The issue included not only well-known younger jianmei stars who were once trained in song
and dance troupes, but also older stars who had never revealed their skin. This showed how much jianmei
had become a generally appealing quality for Chinese cinema stars to possess. Linglong 189, 26 June
1935, p. 1444.
Hu Die nüshi xiezhen ji, vol. 12 (Shanghai: Liangyou tushu yinshua gongsi, 1933), p. 8; Li Lili, Xingyun
liushui pian (Beijing: Zhongguo dianying chubanshe, 2001), p. 168.
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61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
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Linglong 127, 10 January 1934, p. 123.
Lee, Shanghai Modern, pp. 46, 63.
Lee, Shanghai Modern, pp. 65, 74.
‘Guangzhou xuanju datui meiren’, Linglong 198, 21 October 1935, p. 2042.
‘Xuanju Shanghai xiaojie’, Linglong 198, 21 August 1935, p. 2074.
E.g., the Nationalists considered Communism, the original target of the New Life Movement, illegitimate
on the grounds that the physical appearances of Communist women did not fit into state codes. After
the split between the Nationalist Party and the Communist Party in 1927, Nationalist Party forces killed
thousands of ‘modern’ women because they were accused of ‘free love’, or sometimes simply because
they had bobbed hair, unbound feet or a local reputation for opposing familial authority. When the actress
Li Lili travelled across Shaanxi to Inner Mongolia to make a movie in 1940, she was told that some footbound women with heavy makeup dancing on the streets in Xi’an were Communists. Duara, Sovereignty
and Authenticity, p. 137; Li, Xingyun liushui pian, pp. 114, 119.
Zhongguo di’er lishi dang’an guan (ed.), Zhonghua Minguo shi dang’an ziliao huibian, vol. 5, no. 1: Wen
Huan [Culture] 2 (Nangjing: Jiangsu guji chubanshe, 1991), p. 930.
‘Nüzi shouruo de yuanyin’, Linglong 137, 18 April 1934, pp. 727–8; Zhaoliang, ‘Cong chanzu shuodao
luozu’, Linglong 151, 29 August 1934, pp. 1654–6; ‘Shanghai nüzhong qudi nüsheng shuru’, Linglong
206, 9 October 1935, pp. 3393–4; ‘Gaogeng xie de haichu’, Linglong 234, 1936, p. 1215.
The tabloids rumoured that Huang had dressed inappropriately to attract newspaper attention and promote
her film, which was to be shown in Chongqing. See ‘Huang Jing yixiang tiankai de xuanchuan fangfa’,
Diansheng, 19 June 1936, p. 590.
‘Funü yu xufa yundong’, Linglong 171, 6 February 1935, pp. 259–60; ‘Xin shenghuo yundong zhi funü
xufa yundong’, Linglong 171, 6 February 1935, pp. 306–7; ‘Qudi funü shimao fuzhuang’, Linglong 221,
22 January 1936, pp. 157–8.
‘Xu Lai wei modeng pohuai’, Linglong 136, 11 April 1934, p. 700. William C. Kirby, ‘The Internationalization of China: Foreign Relations at Home and Abroad in the Republican China’, in Frederic Wakeman
Jr and Richard L. Edmonds (eds), Reappraising Republican China (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2000), pp. 179–204, here pp. 190, 195, suggests that Chinese young men’s militarist organisations such
as the Blue Shirt Society (resembling the Italian Blackshirts) played an important role in the New Life
Movement, which combined Confucianism with Fascism. It seems that the ‘modern fashion destruction
troupes’ were inspired by the Blue Shirt Society.
Similarly, popular hygiene literature of the European life reform movement doubted the legitimacy of
cosmetics and cosmetic surgery as contradictory to a person’s real character. Hau, Cult of Life and Beauty
in Germany, p. 180.
Cao Xiulin, ‘Xin nüzi ying you zhi zhunbei’, Linglong 3, 1 April 1931, p. 79; 4, 8 April 1931, p. 124;
Zhiying, ‘Yao xian mei de liliang’, Linglong 3, 1 April 1931, pp. 89–91; Miss Xiuling, ‘Nü yundong
jia zhuji’, Linglong 50, 18 May 1932, pp. 2074–5; Li Mingxia, ‘Zuo yiwei xiandai nüzi’, Linglong 196,
7 August 1935, pp. 1911–12.
As a common style of dress, qipao can be categorised as either ‘fancy’ and ‘bizarre dress’ incompatible
with jianmei or plain clothing consistent with jianmei based on fabric, cut and decorations. Karl Gerth,
China Made: Consumer Culture and the Creation of the Nation (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
2003), p. 22, suggests that ‘the conditions of production rather than the national origins of the style or type
of good defined product-nationality’. For comments on German opposition to women’s fashion associated
with corrupt, artificial urban life, see Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, p. 55.
Qiong, ‘Tan Deguo jin nüzi tu zhifen’, Linglong 107, 23 August 1933, pp. 1399–1401; Jiang xinlang,
‘Fufen ye shi yishu’, Linglong 3, 1 April 1931, p. 91; Miss Yunfang, ‘Fufen fengchao: wo guo jiaoyu jie
youwu ganxiang’, Linglong 13, 10 June 1931, p. 443; ‘Xuefu bianwei zhifen chang’, Linglong 130, 31
January 1934, p. 263; Huasheng, ‘Cong Deguo de weisheng fuzhuang yundong tandao Zhongguo shimao
funü de yanghua’, Linglong 221, 22 January 1936, pp. 167–9.
Chen Mulan, ‘Tan funü yu shechi ping’, Linglong 240, 10 June 1936, pp. 1669–71.
Lian, ‘Zai guoshi weidai zhong, xin nüxing yinggai zenyang’, Linglong 260, 4 November 1936,
pp. 3328–30.
Gail Hershatter, Dangerous Pleasures: Prostitution and Modernity in Twentieth-Century Shanghai (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997), pp. 246–70, suggests that, since late Qing, nationalist and feminist writers linked prostitution with national weakness and the quest for modernity. It was more explicit
during the ‘national crisis’.
‘Changsha jinü pei taozhang’, Linglong 173, 27 February 1935, p. 445; ‘Taiyuan fandui jinü tangfa gelü’,
Linglong 184, 22 May 1935, pp. 1131–2; ‘Taiyuan jinü shixing tangfa he chuan gaogeng xie’, Linglong
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80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
101.
185, 29 May 1935, p. 1210; ‘Hankou jiang huading changji qu’, Linglong 191, 3 July 1935, p. 1574; ‘Qudi
funü shimao fuzhuang’, Linglong 221, 22 January 1936, pp. 157–8; ‘Guangdong funü buyong toujin’,
Linglong 221, 22 January 1936, pp. 186–7.
‘Nanbei ji’, Linglong 153, 19 September 1934, p. 1805.
‘Riben yiji he nü zhaodai yiqi jiaru guofang yundong’, Linglong 283, 28 April 1937, pp. 1225–6.
As part of the efforts to embrace a new modest image, they tried to learn modern, socially relevant plays (huaju) in addition to the traditional pingju romances. ‘Guanyu shoudu genü de xunlian’,
Linglong 240, 10 June 1936, pp. 1645–6; ‘Shoudu jinü zhi jinbu’, Linglong 137, 18 April 1934,
p. 726.
‘Zhenjiang zhuzhi jiaofang nüzi minzhong xueshe miaowen’, Linglong 190, 26 June 1935, pp. 1525–6.
‘Taiyuan fandui jinü tangfa gelu’, Linglong 184, 22 May 1935, pp. 1131–2.
‘Qudi funü shimao fuzhuang’, Linglong 221, 22 January 1936, pp. 157–8; ‘Zhenjiang zhuzhi jiaofang
nüzi minzhong xueshe miaowen’, Linglong 189, 26 June 1935, p. 1526.
‘Funü yu xufa yundong’, Linglong 171, 6 February 1935, pp. 259–60; Pengzi, ‘Zhengqi tangfa zai
Hangzhou’, Linglong 221, 1936, p. 184.
Pingzi, ‘Qudi nanzi qizhuang yifu’, Linglong 158, 24 October 1934, pp. 2101–3; ‘Nannü luti fa zuo
kugong’, Linglong 197, 14 August 1935, pp. 2061–2.
Several telegrams from Beijing appealed to the Department of Education to stop Mayor Yuan Liang’s
ban on co-education, in order to protect equality in education. At the same time, the head of the Henan
Education Bureau announced that the bureau would combine girls’ and boys’ middle schools in 1935,
in order to save money and develop general education. Ni, ‘Biekai shengmian de jinling’, Linglong 151,
29 August 1934, pp. 1651–3, 1709; ‘Pingshi choushe nüzi gongyu’, Linglong 191, 3 July 1935, p. 1572;
‘Nannü luoti youyong’, Linglong 191, 3 July 1935, p. 1573; ‘Yu shixing nannü tongxue’, Linglong 198,
21 October 1935, p. 2143.
Jingzi, ‘Waiguo zuojia de Zhongguo nüxing guan’, Linglong 194, 24 July 1935, pp. 1760–62.
‘Jinzhi luozu sheng zhong yi fansheng’, Linglong 151, 29 August 1934, pp. 1664–5, 1709; Linjun, ‘Qudi
funü luotui’, Linglong 152, 20 September 1934, pp. 1715–16; Miss Liu Mei, ‘Shehui fugu qingxiang
zhong funü ying you de zijue’, Linglong 157, 17 October 1934, pp. 2035–8.
‘“Sancun jinlian” yu xin shenghuo’, Linglong 158, 24 October 1934, p. 2114.
Shanxi yi cungu, ‘Qing jiuji chizu luotui’, Linglong 154, 26 September 1934, p. 1856; ‘Jinzhi luozu sheng
zhong yi fansheng’, Linglong 151, 29 August 1934, pp. 1664–5; Miss Liu Mei, ‘Shehui fugu qingxiang
zhong funü ying you de zijue’, Linglong 157, 17 October 1934, pp. 2035–8.
‘Jinzhi luozu sheng zhong yi fansheng’.
Xiujuan, ‘Luti fasheng wenti’, Linglong 4, 8 April 1931, p. 112.
Miss Qixiu, ‘Luoti wenxian’, Linglong 191, 3 July 1935, pp. 1519–22; Yingwu, ‘Luoti mei suyuan’,
Linglong 186, 5 June 1935, p. 1034.
Linglong 29, 30 September 1931, pp. 1076–7; 39, 9 December 1931, pp. 1532–3; 50, 18 May 1932,
p. 2069; 53, 8 June 1932, pp. 120–21; 60, 27 July 1932, p. 460; Lisha, ‘Ziran shenghuo yu Deguo funü’,
Linglong 88, 22 March 1933, pp. 344–5.
Zeng Na, ‘Luoti da jihui zhi canju’, Linglong 56, 29 June 1932, p. 281; ‘Daojie luoti zhuyi zhe’, Linglong
197, 14 August 1935, p. 2060; Fenzhen, ‘Fenlan zhi luoti zhuzhi’, Linglong 221, 22 January 1936,
pp. 178–9; ‘Xiangfen liao de dongji yundong chang’, Linglong 271, 27 January 1937, pp. 311–4.
Ma Xiaojin, ‘Tan Luoti’, Linglong 189, 26 June 1935, pp. 1441–2; 191, 3 July 1935, p. 1528; Xiangcun,
‘Luoti jiating’, Linglong 241, 17 June 1936, pp. 1794–8; ‘Meiguo de luoti xueyuan’, Linglong 271,
27 January 1937, pp. 312–13.
Linglong 2, 25 March 1931, pp. 46–7; Lisha, ‘Ziran shenghuo yu deguo funü’, Linglong 88, 22 March
1933, pp. 344–5; ‘Huabu zhi Yadang Xiawa’, Linglong 97, 1933, p. 763; ‘Dongjing wu chunü’, Linglong
169, 23 January 1935, pp. 143–4.
Linglong 43, 13 January 1932 [wrongly dated 1931], p. 1723; 102, 12 July 1933, p. 1103; 206, 9 October
1935, p. 3344; Zhaoliang, ‘Luoti yu fushi’, Linglong 225, 26 February 1936, pp. 463–6.
Tan Xishan, ‘Luoti, bansu, shi hewu: yiguo qingdiao’, Linglong 232, 24 June 1936, pp. 1025–7; ‘Qingshi
zhi liubing yundong’, Linglong 225, 26 February 1936, pp. 526–7; 228, 18 March 1936, pp. 724–5;
Yaofang, “Guangxi Yaoren funü de shenghuo”, 97, 31 May 1933, p. 760.
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