
Lisa See does an excellent job using the story of Lily and Snow Flower to paint a vivid picture of Chinese culture, especially women's culture. My 21st century brain was routinely appalled by how the women were treated. But nothing was as horrifying as the description of the foot binding process. The girls toes were bent under their foot and bound there. They were then forced to walk on them until they broke, and the foot slowly bent under until there was only the big toe left to balance on. Perhaps the most disturbing part was the fact that it was generally their mothers who bound their feet. As a mother myself, I can't imagine the social pressure that a person must be under to cause that kind of pain to your own child.
It also struck me reading this novel how many times in the history of the world people have created social rules that in fact work against not just their self-interest, but their actual survival. Forced to flee their homes due to civil unrest, many of the women died trying to walk up a mountain on their "golden lilies", as their small bound feet were called. Purposely keeping whole classes of people illiterate also seems counterproductive, to say the least. And of course, determining a woman's value by her physical attributes...seems like we're still working on a few of those today.
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