Choosing Between Life and Love
Author: Shanshan Du
Abstract:
This article examines the ways in which some star-crossed lovers
reconcile their romantic attachments and social constraints through
life-and-death negotiation of the gender ideals among the Lahu of
Lancang, Southwest China. While the prevailing Lahu ideal of the
husband-wife dyad (in which the married pair functions as a single
social entity) fosters gender equality and marital stability and
harmony, the dyad ideal also models romantic expressions through the
ritualized singing of courtship songs that ordinarily lead to a
marriage. The gaps between the dyadic ideology and its practice, which
have been drastically magnified since the Chinese state introduced
radical social changes in the 1950s, have significantly increased both
dysfunctional marriages and extramarital relationships. This article
explores the diverse patterns in which some individuals appropriate the
courtship singing sessions to both express their socially disapproved
romance and to resolve their dilemma caused by personal romantic
longings that contradict social obligations. Resolving these dilemmas
typically involves compromising romance for socially acceptable
intimacy, committing double suicide in order to marry each other in the
afterlife, or choosing separate paths (in which one member of the
couple commits suicide and the other does not). The author argues that
couples who jointly choose either life apart or love together in the
afterlife do so with oneness in thought and mind, simultaneously
challenging and reinforcing the ideal of the husband-wife dyad. In
contrast, those who commit love-suicide alone push the boundaries of
the dyadic ideal to the extreme.
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