Nu Shu: A Hidden Language of Women in China
Digg it!Stumble!Add to Del.icio.usShare on Facebook
Upcoming Airdates
Timezone: P M C E 
Comments()
Nu Shu: A Hidden Language of Women in China
Related Video
Nu Shu: A Hidden Language of Women in China
Category: Documentaries
Regions: Asia

In feudal China, women, usually with bound feet, were denied educational opportunities and condemned to social isolation. But in Jian-yong county, in Hunan province, peasant women miraculously developed a separate written language, called Nu Shu, meaning "female writing." Believing women to be inferior, men disregarded this new script, and it remained unknown for centuries. This thoroughly engrossing documentary revolves around the filmmaker's discovery of eighty-six-year-old Huan-yi Yang, the only living resident of the Nu Shu area still able to read and write Nu Shu. Exploring Nu Shu customs and their role in women's lives, the film uncovers a women's subculture born of resistance to male dominance, finds a parallel struggle in the resistance of Yao minorities to Confucian Han Chinese culture, and traces Nu Shu's origins to some distinctly Yao customs that fostered women's creativity. Directed by Yue-Qing Yang.
Presented by ITVS