@
jak
Is it though? I'm American, so what I said about my friends telling me to make men pay for everything happened in America. I think that really parallels what's being portrayed in this Chinese manhua.
Very interesting point to bring up, though. I definitely think that China is more restrictive with their "roles" in society... One major influence of that being Confucius, who emphasized that everyone has a "job" and that everyone should fulfil that purpose without question. Obviously, America has been bounds ahead of China in terms of progressive thinking towards women, but it still seems like this "old-fashioned" way of thinking is still prevalent in both cultures. I mean, take wedding rings, for example. They're needlessly expensive and the expectation still is that a man has to buy a ring for his wife if he wants to marry her.
Personally, my parents were conservative so I actually got to see America's less progressive ways of thinking about women. If you haven't grown up with people who think that way, you'd be surprised how many people in America, right now, still believe that a woman's "place" is in the house, and that a man's "place" is in the workforce, providing for his wife.
Are men expected to pay for dates in China? Are they still expected to in America? I would like to think that the expectation has started to fade out in the US, but I don't have any circumstancial evidence to back it up.