Lexington Books
Pages: 182
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-5818-1 • Hardback • May 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-5820-4 • Paperback • April 2023 • $39.99 • (£30.00)
978-1-4985-5819-8 • eBook • May 2019 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Lijun Yuan is professor of philosophy at Texas State University.
Part I
Chapter 1 Strength and Weakness of Early Confucian Ethics on Women
Chapter 2 A Debate about Minben and Minzhu: Toward Caring Democracy
Part II
Chapter 3 Feminist Critiques of Gender Inequality and Ethics of Care
Chapter 4 Notions of Reciprocity: Kongzi, Kant, Beauvoir, and Critiques of Gender Roles
Chapter 5 Methodology of the Ethics of Care: Integrating Care and Justice
Part III
Chapter 6 Hume’s Sympathy, Mengzi’s Empathy, Feminist Interpretations: Extensive Virtue
Chapter 7 China’s Population Policy: Aging, Gender, and Sustainability
This book is a perfect example of the kind of scholarly rigor that all histories of discourse should aspire to and serves as a powerful contribution to the interdisciplinary study of Confucianism, feminism, and the democratization of China.
— Religious Studies Review
Yuan's efforts advance the broader project of highlighting valuable and effective concepts and attitudes within Confucianism that can support feminist social goals. Ren appears to be a good candidate for inclusion in a care ethics framework. Situating ren in the relational ontology of heaven, earth, and humanity, and in the reciprocal ethics of zhong and shu, this book shows where Confucianism can speak the language of feminism, equality, and democracy. It also takes a critical stance in identifying the Confucian concepts and attitudes that stand in the way of gender equality, especially the traditional support of power hierarchies for the sake of social stability. Clearing Confucian theory of this kind of rigid stratification may make it much more applicable to the contemporary egalitarian milieu. This paves the way for actual policies--such as state-sponsored home medical care for elderly women in rural China--that recognize the existential need in every human life to be cared for at times. Yuan's vision of this is an egalitarian ren politics of reciprocal caring with each other, which is a contemporary moral ideal rooted in the deep wisdom of traditional values.
— Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy
Lijun Yuan has presented a renovating, robust study of Confucian and feminist care ethics, and creatively engage in a profound dialogue between Eastern and Western philosophies. This is as grounded and deep account of care ethics as one who does comparative studies wishes for. It also raises the profound questions of the foundation of ethics. The suggestion of a fusion of the Confucian and feminist horizons of the book is thought-provocative, and attractive.
— Xunwu Chen, University of Texas
A most comprehensive comparative study of Confucian ethics of ren in ancient China and feminist ethics of care in contemporary West, Yuan's book exemplifies a unique and highly fruitful methodology of comparative philosophy. It also seamlessly combines theoretical construction and practical concerns. A must read for anyone who is interest in Confucianism, feminism, and/or comparative philosophy.— Huang Yong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
The book is a timely synthesis of the Ethics of Care and Confucian reciprocity, bringing together the promise of disparate philosophical traditions, one ancient, one modern, to help improve the lives of contemporary girls and women. — Maureen Sander-Staudt, Southwest Minnesota State University