摘要
In Intolerable Cruelty: Marriage, Law, and Society in Early Twentieth-Century China, Margaret Kuo argues that legal reforms allowed wives in the Republican era unprecedented opportunities to leave abusive or undesirable marriages. In addition to reevaluating Republican-era law, Kuo significantly contributes to scholarship by acknowledging the agency of the wives who brought forth their cases in court. In contrast to CCP scholarship that "has worked to expunge GMD contributions" to women's rights and family law (p. 12), Kuo argues that the Republican era offered flexible solutions during "an important transitional period" (19. 198).
In Intolerable Cruelty: Marriage, Law, and Society in Early Twentieth-Century China, Margaret Kuo argues that legal reforms allowed wives in the Republican era unprecedented opportunities to leave abusive or undesirable marriages. In addition to reevaluating Republican-era law, Kuo significantly contributes to scholarship by acknowledging the agency of the wives who brought forth their cases in court. In contrast to CCP scholarship that "has worked to expunge GMD contributions" to women's rights and family law (p. 12), Kuo argues that the Republican era offered flexible solutions during "an important transitional period" (19. 198).