Home > Feminism > Women and Women's Writings from Antiquity Through the Middle Ages - Nancy Lee Swann (Essay Date 1932)

Women and Women's Writings from Antiquity Through the Middle Ages - Nancy Lee Swann (Essay Date 1932)

NANCY LEE SWANN (ESSAY DATE 1932)

SOURCE: Swann, Nancy Lee. "The Moralist." In Pan Chao: Foremost Woman Scholar of China, pp. 133-39. New York: Russell & Russell, 1968.

In the following excerpt, originally published in 1932, Swann examines the moral precepts of Pan Chao's first-century A.D. treatise Lessons for Women, the oldest known work of its kind.

Pan Chao holds a unique place in the history of Chinese philosophy, as the first thinker to formulate a single complete statement of feminine ethics. Despite its brevity, her "Lessons for Women" not only contains an elucidation of the science of the perfecting of womanly character—a system of theoretical moral principles,—but also lays down rules for the practical application of these principles. Although the basis of this science is an unchanging moral code, which is affirmed in the most absolute manner, many of its rules are such as could...

[The entire page is 3036 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: