The roles of women in Chinese archaeology, with only a few exceptions,
have at worst been overlooked, and at best consigned to conventional
Marxist theory that prescribes formulaic frameworks for understanding
gender--until now. Renowned archaeologist Katheryn M. Linduff and fellow
researcher Yan Sun have brought together a fascinating collection that
reexamines gender in ancient Chinese cultures. Acknowledging and
negotiating the complications that challenge their efforts, the authors
analyze and begin to reconstruct the roles of women in various regions
of China from the late Neolithic to the early Empire period. Topics
range from mortuary ritual, social status and structures of power,
economic influences on cultural practice, textile production, and art in
these early Chinese societies. This book is a must for students,
professors, and practitioners of archaeology that seek a more complete
examination of the archaeological record, for scholars in the fields of
Asian Studies, Art History, and Chinese History more generally, as well
as for those interested in the roles of women in ancient Chinese
society.