The Golden Lotus: Beauty vs Brutality | Maidstone Museum (2024)

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The golden lotus

Beth Anderson take a fascinating look into the traditional Chinese practice of feet binding

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The Golden Lotus: Beauty vs Brutality | Maidstone Museum (2)

13th Oct 2016

By Beth Anderson

These shoes are so tiny they would sit easily in the palm of your hand. Their design and embroidery are delicate and fine. It may strike you, however, that the stockinged ankles are very large in comparison to the minute shoes. The ankles are too big, for example, to imitate those of a little girl growing up in the higher reaches of Chinese society, an image that fits well with the size of the shoes.

In fact, this tiny footwear is an example of lotus shoes, worn by women whose feet were bound. Tiny feet in China were a symbol of beauty; today, they are synonymous with pain and deformity.

The lotus flower, a symbolically significant flower across Eastern countries and religions, is associated with beauty, enlightenment and rebirth. Every morning the lotus flower emerges elegant and pure from muddy waters. In Buddhism, the white lotus flower is symbolic of Bodhi, or, being awakened. Thus the lotus is also a symbol of desire and fertility.

Origins of feetbinding

The connotations of the lotus flower are subsequently heartwarming – love, kinship, spiritual and mental awakening, a resistance to the impurities of the world. So how did bound feet come to be known as lotus feet? Did the beauty emerge foremost in the eyes of the beholder?

In 10th-century China, Emperor Li Yu of the Southern Tang Dynasty (937–975) asked his concubine to bind her feet with white silk into the shape of a crescent moon. Her feet bound, she danced gracefully over golden lotus flowers. Li Yu praised her feet as perfect. Women sought to imitate her beauty and her movement. The fashion for the lotus foot was born.

As bound feet became more and more alluring to the male gaze, so more women embarked on permanently deforming themselves to fulfil this new ideal. Indeed, as the Dynasties rolled by, foot binding spread from the upper to the peasant classes. For the poor it promised a brighter, more prosperous future. At a time when arranged marriages were frequent, the golden lotus (at four inches, the smallest and thereby most admired foot size) was believed to increase your chances of attracting a husband of higher status and wealth. Though footbinding was a painful process, girls bore the pain with pride. From its beginnings in the 10th century, it was to be an entire millennia before foot binding finally ceased in China after many campaigns to bring an end to the practice.

The risks of reward

Today we primarily view this practice as a violation of women’s rights, a brutal infliction of lifelong pain and deformity. It is hard to reconcile this with the lotus shoes and symbol of beauty to which women aspired. However, we should try to view these objects through the paradigm of the time as much as possible. Feet were not only bound in order to attain the shape, the bones of the toes and the arch of the feet were broken. Infection could spread to the toe bones and toes were often lost. Without toes, bindings could be tightened further, and the golden lotus ideal became even more attainable.

The procedure was started when a girl was between four and nine years old. The process would have varied regionally, but generally feet were first softened in a bath of herbs and animal blood, and the toe nails were cut short. The four smallest toes were then bent under until these bones were broken. They were bound tightly against the sole of the foot and the foot was drawn down until the arch was also broken. Bindings were wrapped in a figure of eight and pulled tighter on each turn. Ideally, the bandages were removed and clean bandages reapplied every day. The toe nails would be trimmed, the feet washed, and the broken joints kneaded to make them more malleable. It could take up to two years of this punishing regime to reach the desired size.

A sign of wealth

A woman would become inhibited in her movements and, in the upper classes of society, this was considered a sign of wealth; a woman with bound feet did not need to work. But not only could she not work, she would have struggled to leave the house, making her dependent on her husband and other men within the household. In the poorer communities, women were still obliged to work the land.

Consider the function of the shoe itself. The pair that we hold in our collection are, I suspect, hand embroidered. Lotus shoes were delicate and desirable, but they also had another very specific function. Very rarely did a woman show her bindings. Unlike the lotus flower, there would have been nothing clean, graceful and pure about them. The debilitating bindings caused the women to adopt a slightly bow-legged sway as they walked. Ultimately, to men and women alike, it was likely known and understood that the allure and the fantasy of the golden lotus would not withstand the reality.

The Golden Lotus: Beauty vs Brutality | Maidstone Museum (2024)

FAQs

Why was foot binding banned? ›

Footbinding is often seen by feminists as an oppressive practice against women who were victims of a sexist culture. It is also widely seen as a form of violence against women. Bound feet rendered women dependent on their families, particularly the men, as they became largely restricted to their homes.

Why were bound feet considered beautiful? ›

Foot-binding not only gave women a subservient domestic status, but also rendered them sex objects to satisfy men's erotic desires. Women with tiny feet were regarded as pretty and charming because of their graceful, slender figure.

Is foot binding still practiced in China? ›

In China, the practice is now illegal but there are still cases of women and girls who continue to bind their feet. In other parts of the world, such as India and Nepal, the practice is not illegal and it is often done as a form of cultural expression.

How painful was foot binding? ›

I've often heard comparisons of this strange and extreme practice with the modern day wearing of high, uncomfortable shoes by women. In reality there IS no comparison. Foot binding was incredibly painful and quite barbaric and caused long-term, irreparable damage.

At what age did foot binding begin for a girl? ›

Footbinding usually began when girls were between 4 and 6 years old; some were as young as 3, and some as old as 12. Mothers, grandmothers, or older female relatives first bound the girl's feet.

Is foot binding unhealthy? ›

In many cases the intense pain of foot-binding was exacerbated by infection (which sometimes led to gangrene), hindered circulation, and weakened bones and ligaments.

Why did bound feet smell? ›

But for author Yang Yang, whose mother had bound feet, the reality was far more prosaic. "The bandages that women used for footbinding were about 10 feet long, so it was difficult for them to wash their feet," Yang says. "They only washed once every two weeks, so it was very, very stinky.

Can foot binding be reversed? ›

Once a foot had been crushed and bound, the shape could not be reversed without a woman undergoing the same pain all over again. As the practice of foot-binding makes brutally clear, social forces in China then subjugated women.

Did the Japanese practice foot binding? ›

The dates are also crucial because the Japanese intensified their efforts in eradicating footbinding in the 1910s until they outright banned it in 1915.

Why did Chinese men like foot binding? ›

Historians of the period have noted that Chinese men viewed foot-binding as conducive to better sexual intercourse because they believed that women with bound feet had vagin*s that were more highly muscled and sensitive.

What did Chinese bound feet look like? ›

Their feet were bound tightly with cloth strips, with the toes bent down under the sole of the foot, and the foot tied front-to-back so that the grew into an exaggerated high curve. The ideal adult female foot would be only three to four inches in length. These tiny, deformed feet were known as "lotus feet."

What were the consequences of foot binding? ›

Having bound feet would drastically affect a woman's balance, her ability to walk, and her posture. Foot binding resulted in the forward curvature of the lumbar vertebrae as a result of a woman struggling to balance and walk properly.

What is the point of foot binding? ›

Footbinding was an old Chinese tradition that wrapped bandages tightly around the feet of little girls so their feet would not grow in size. The bindings deformed the growth of the feet painfully, and the girls would have difficulties walking.

Who has lotus feet? ›

So, it is said that Lord Krishna's has feet like lotus flowers. The Lord's lotus feet are called mahat-padam. This means that everything that exists in the world comes from the Lord's lotus feet.

Was foot binding practiced in Korea? ›

No, out of the many things Korea did adopt from China, foot binding was [thankfully] not one of them. There's no references to it in Korean records or artwork, no allusions to it in literature, and no evidence of it by the 19th century when Europeans were bashing the Chinese about it.

What were the reasons that foot binding stopped? ›

Opposition to the practice of foot binding initially began during the Manchu rule in China. The Manchus ruled over China in the Qing Dynasty between the years of 1644 and 1911. They did not support the customs of foot binding and wanted to abolish the practice.

Did foot binding break toes? ›

It was obvious why the process had to begin in childhood when a girl was 5 or 6. First, her feet were plunged into hot water and her toenails clipped short. Then the feet were massaged and oiled before all the toes, except the big toes, were broken and bound flat against the sole, making a triangle shape.

Why do bound feet smell? ›

“They only washed once every two weeks, so it was very, very stinky.” Some of that stink may well have come from the frequent infections, occasionally leading to gangrene, caused by the process of foot binding.

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