Drawing on largely untapped sources that highlight the voices of Vietnamese themselves, Familial Properties explores the roles of women as daughters, concubines, wives, mothers, and widows in the neo-Confucian order of early modern Vietnam. Its path-breaking approach illuminates the ways in which women at all levels of society were able to negotiate and at times challenge gender norms, despite their legal and sexual subordination and the state’s endorsement of male superiority. Richly detailed, analytically insightful, and clearly written, Familial Properties represents a major contribution to Southeast Asian history and to the global field of gender studies. How does one write about Vietnamese gender relations from the fifteenth through eighteenth centuries, a time of social dislocation, militarization, and war? What if the evidentiary basis for a study is uneven? In this innovative work based on extensive research, Nhung Tuyet Tran examines gender relations through an exploration of sexuality, property relations, and relations with ghosts in the afterlife. Patriarchal laws constrained women’s choices, but women could still use strategies to work around constraints. An eye-opening work that sheds light on both the premodern history of gender in Vietnam and on modern debates about gender as well.