Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 304
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2371-5 • Paperback • September 2005 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-0-7425-7128-0 • eBook • October 2005 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Nie Jing-Bao is senior lecturer at the Bioethics Centre, University of Otago, New Zealand, and adjunct/visiting professor at several Chinese universities. He has published nearly sixty journal articles and book chapters, and is the author of Medical Ethics in China (2006). Another area of his research focuses on Japanese wartime medical atrocities in China.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 Listening to the Silence: The Absence of Public Debate and Its Meaning
Chapter 4 'Instructions' from Above: Official Positions
Chapter 5 The Forgotten Controversies: Heritage of Imperial Times
Chapter 6 Tidings from the Populace: Consensus and Contention in the Survey Results
Chapter 7 Bitterness beyond Words: Women's Narratives
Chapter 8 Fulfilling Discordant Duties: Doctors' Narratives
Chapter 8 An Inquiry into Coerced Abortion: Sociocultural and Ethical Issues
Chapter 9 The Challenge of Cross-Cultural Dialogue: Taking Seriously China's Internal Plu
Chapter 10 Appendix: The Pilot Study, the Survey, and the Interviews
Chapter 12 References
Chapter 13 Acknowledgements
Nie's important book?examine[s] the diverse and difficult experiences and views of different groups of Chinese people?.In addressing the moral experience of abortion in China, it brings to light the multifaceted, complex and difficult dimensions of an issue that continues to be excluded from public debate by the political constraints of the Chinese state....
— Harriet Evans, University of Westminster
Jing-Bao Nie's nuanced account of abortion in China has provided me with a new set of lenses through which to view abortion as it is theorized and practiced in the United States. Sensitive to issues of gender, race, and class; aware of hierarchies of power in the public, professional, and private realms; and attentive to debates about women's rights and responsibilities, he provides the means for previously repressed and suppressed voices to speak loudly about one of their most difficult choices: to say 'yes' or 'no' to new life. Nie has written a book for all seasons that I intend to use in my courses on Ethics and Public Policy, Health Care Ethics and Law, and Feminist Thought...
— Rosemarie Tong, Distinguished Professor in Health Care Ethics and director of the Center for Professional and Applied Ethics, University of Nort
An important work about abortion in China....Nie's rich background is a perfect combination of medicine and sociology, with roots in Chinese culture, making his contribution to this area of research unique. This well-organized, readable book is useful formultiple disciplines in the social sciences. Highly recommended....
— R. Wang
[A] remarkable achievement. Nie?s overarching project, the eclipsing of stereotypes held in the West about a monolithic and mono-cultural Chinese experience, can be said to be an unqualified triumph. Not only does the work represent a hitherto unexaminedarea of Chinese society, it contributes to a theory of ethics that must coexist with this contentious subject matter?.Nie?s book is about the morality and ethics of abortion as much as it is about the multifaceted grounds for a medical procedure, and itsfrequently devastating effects on the lives of Chinese women...
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[A] unique and comprehensive study of abortion and its moral and ethical contexts in contemporary mainland China....Nie has made a tremendous contribution to scholarship in the area by giving a voice to so many silenced women and bringing to light some ofthe diverse personal meanings and experiences of aboration in contemporary China...This book with its clear and comprehensive exposition...can be recommended to a wide range of readers from specialists in Chinese ethics, sociology or women's studies, right through to undergraduate students taking general courses on Chinese society and culture...
— Rosemary Roberts