In response to The Other China
(October 22, 1992)
To the Editors:
Although I am normally a great admirer of Jonathan Spence's writings about China, I was surprised that his otherwise-encyclopedic essay about Taiwan [NYR, October 22, 1992] ignored the role of women and the women's movement in the Taiwanese people's struggle toward democracy.
Spence referred to eight "men" who were convicted in the 1980 rigged political trials. Actually, two of the eight were women: Lü Hsiu-lien and Ch'en Chü.
True, most of the political leaders imprisoned around this time (in addition to the well-known eight, there were about 60 others) were male. However, in many cases their wives took up the struggle. They, and other women, ran for public offices which, however powerless, gave them a platform from which to shame the government into eliminating some of the more primitive features of the Kuomintang political system. At the same time, by their example they then advanced the position of women in society to an extent probably unmatched in any other East Asian country.
James D. Seymour