
CARTA: Footbinding: A Gene-Culture Co-evolutionary Approach to a One Thousand Year Tradition with Ryan Nichols
CARTA: Body Modification: Anatomy, Alteration, and Art in Anthropogeny
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
February 11, 202415m 28s
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Show Notes
This talk explores the 1000-year practice of "footbinding" in ethnically Han Chinese families, involving modifying young girls' feet by wrapping the toes under the sole, often resulting in broken toes. Two main hypotheses—Labor Market and Evolutionary Social Sciences—are considered for explaining the origins, maintenance, and cessation of footbinding. This talk presents evidence from autopsy results, medical examinations, anthropological records, interviews, and historical texts. It argues that evolutionary social and psychological principles related to hypergyny, mate guarding, parental competition, mate competition, and paternal uncertainty offer better explanations for the origins and maintenance of footbinding than labor market factors. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 39472]
Topics
CARTAhuman bodybody modificationbody alterationtattootattoosbody arttattoo artpiercingpiercingsbody piercingbody piercingssubdermal implantsbody alterationbody modification culturepermanent body modificationfootbindingH