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  • FRIDAY APRIL 13 2007 12:00 AM

Tattooed Tribe of Chinese Women: Scarred for Life?



Tattooing Chinese women was a coming-of-age ritual that guaranteed marriage in the Li tribe. Up until the 1960s, the women living in isolated areas of the resort island Hainan have been covered from head to toe in a series of intricate geometric patterns that often times represented centuries of their family history. For over 2,000 years these tattoos were considered talismans against evil, and were used to make the tribe's women appear ugly to foreign kidnappers but beautiful to their own kin.

The weeklong process is done by piercing the skin with thorns and rubbing soot mixed with water into the wounds.

While in the past marriage was almost impossible for women without these tattooed designs, the ritual has now become an undesirable practice that limits chances for success in modern times.

Reuters.com reports, "The tattooed women of China are a dying breed."

Fu Renmei is one of the last generation of Li women to be tattooed. She went through the ritual aged 13.

"I was happy! Why? Before, if you didn't have tattoos then your boyfriend would not marry you. My grandmother told me that girls who didn't tattoo would be kidnapped. If you are tattooed you will look ugly so you will be safe," she said.
[...]
Her daughter, Fu Yingwu, says she would never consider getting a tattoo, since in today's China, they are an obstacle to getting a good job, especially in a resort in Hainan.

"I would never want to tattoo because now everyone likes white, unblemished skin. Why would I want to look like an old person with dark skin?," Fu said.

 

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Comments
EL_Scootro

EL_Scootro

Pittsburgh, PA
January 2005

APR 13, 2007 12:37 AM

i want a tattooed chick.

dragonflower

dragonflower

Austin, TX
January 2007

APR 13, 2007 12:37 AM

how sad. where does history go when it dies? frown

Snottlebocket

Snottlebocket

Netherlands
March 2004

APR 13, 2007 01:20 AM

dragonflower said:
how sad. where does history go when it dies? frown



Adapt or die. By the sound of things those tattoos were in part an adaptation to their surroundings, one which is no longer necesary.

They quit using those tattoos for the same reason they started using them, cultural necesity.

Max16Characters

Max16Characters

Korea, Republic Of
March 2003

APR 13, 2007 01:22 AM

The amount of money people spend on "whitening" creme in Asia is ridiculous.

Snottlebocket

Snottlebocket

Netherlands
March 2004

APR 13, 2007 01:28 AM

Max16Characters said:
The amount of money people spend on "whitening" creme in Asia is ridiculous.



Especially considering we're getting bombarded with tanning creme ads.

Hafu

Hafu

Charlottesville, VA
February 2005

APR 13, 2007 03:57 AM

this is a changing trend. darker skin is becoming normal again. but the european/western hairstyles will be 'in' for a long time.

XamaX_is_Dead

XamaX_is_Dead

La Mesa, CA
March 2007

APR 13, 2007 04:41 AM

it is sad that society be it brittish, french, or another country assimilates smaller cultures and wipes out their cultural identity much like was done to Native Americans. this became much more evident to me recently when i was looking at child reering habits in Russia. in days past some of the things done by local indegenious people we would consider superstitious, silly, or worse, but it is sad that these things pass to the way side for the sake of progress, advancement, or conquest. it is interesting to note that about the same time the Li tribe stopped practicing their tattoo rituals (the 1960's) the people of Hawaii started a cultural revival (the 1970's) and began to reidentify with their roots and ancesteral ways. i am all for advancement but not at the expense of cultural uniqness. our differences are what make us great! It is a dark day indeed when a culture loses it's identity to the conquerer. such is the way of things though, and has been for thousands of years. I guess we all have to deal with it. I found the tattoos on the woman pictured to be reminisent of Maori facial tattoos. The Maori have fought long and hard to retain, mantain, and indeed revive their culture. in 1974 a cultural self identification act was passed that allowed people with no Maori ancestory to vote in Maori affairs. I don't 100% agree with this, but if these people are willing to carry on traditional values, beliefs and ways then yeah it is a great idea, i wish more cultures had "wannabes". it is sad to see the passing, or fading of so many traditional ways. there is knowledge to be learned from these civilizations, but to often with conquering cultures the goal is expansion of land and ideas alone, and not learning. it is hard to say what will happen with the Li Tribe's beautiful art form in this day and age, it could resurge like in hawaii and New Zeland, or perhaps we are bearing witness to the beginning of the end of cultural identity. if you don't fit into the cookie cutter way of things, you are expendable. I guess soon, the only cultural identification will be waving the flag of a country your grandparents lived in, but you have never been to, seen, or really known anything about. all you know is you are half this, 3/4 that, part this... it's sad that all you know is you're parent's, grandparents, etc, came from so and so, but never bother to learn anything about that culture... sad... yeah... that's life... i shouldn't drink so much then type. i get preachy.

Snottlebocket

Snottlebocket

Netherlands
March 2004

APR 13, 2007 04:57 AM

I think it's sad people apply such double standards to everything. Nobody is regretting they don't dress in the traditional garb of their own great grandparents, but when some foreign culture gets rid of their little rituals it's suddenly a crying shame.

Losing rituals and culture is nothing new, it's been going on since the birth of mankind and they get replaced just as fast by new rituals and culture.

bairdduvessa

bairdduvessa

Centerville, MA
April 2005

APR 13, 2007 05:08 AM

its a shame

bairdduvessa

bairdduvessa

Centerville, MA
April 2005

APR 13, 2007 05:08 AM

its a shame

Domo_Kun

Domo_Kun

Rockford, IL
March 2005

APR 13, 2007 06:01 AM

Snottlebocket said:

dragonflower said:
how sad. where does history go when it dies? frown



Adapt or die. By the sound of things those tattoos were in part an adaptation to their surroundings, one which is no longer necesary.

They quit using those tattoos for the same reason they started using them, cultural necesity.



I agree. Human societies are a sum of their parts. Their parts are alive and in a constant state of flux, and so they are as well. Stagnation is death. Sometimes, a society feels a need to abandon a centuries-old tradition because it doesn't fit in with modern society and because the reason for that tradition no longer exists. So long as no one is forcing the individuals in that society to abandon their tradiditions (And, let's face it, no one is), who are we to say "That's such a shame"?

SouGei

SouGei

Blackwood, NJ
January 2007

APR 13, 2007 07:42 AM

People don't wanna do it, they don't do it! It's kinda like foot binding (except it looks cool.) I'm really surprised this survived at all post-Cultural Revolution at all, I've never heard of it.

I'm sure it'll be revived at some point, like Samoan or Maori stuff.

wildswan

wildswan

I'm lost
June 2006

APR 13, 2007 07:57 AM

Very interesting.

On one hand it speaks to the idea of women as property and *tools* of war and power, and on the other the loss of this cultural identity speaks about the power of Western culture to make non-Western cultures feel inferior, and reject their own identity.

Tritone

Tritone

Saint Paul, MN
May 2004

APR 13, 2007 08:01 AM

wildswan said:
Very interesting.

On one hand it speaks to the idea of women as property and *tools* of war and power, and on the other the loss of this cultural identity speaks about the power of Western culture to make non-Western cultures feel inferior, and reject their own identity.



Ah, I see you took Contempt 1101. tongue

wildswan

wildswan

I'm lost
June 2006

APR 13, 2007 08:05 AM

Tritone said:

wildswan said:
Very interesting.

On one hand it speaks to the idea of women as property and *tools* of war and power, and on the other the loss of this cultural identity speaks about the power of Western culture to make non-Western cultures feel inferior, and reject their own identity.



Ah, I see you took Contempt 1101. tongue





Contempt?

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