This book explores gender topics related to social transitions and social struggles in the context of the urban transformations accompanying the evolving political economy of Chinas New Era, here defined as the period since 2017.
Analyzing a range of feminist perspectives, and empirically based feminist research, the book investigates the ways in which national policies and campaigns imposed under the discursive political framing of the New Era, seep into the everyday lives of people, influencing how societies are transformed and how urban spaces, gendered social practices, lived experiences, and subjectivities are being (re)shaped and modified. Through explorations of these aspects of the New Era this book reveals the new challenges and possibilities faced by different gendered social groups in contemporary Chinese society.
Providing rich deliberations on gender topics related to urban developments in Chinas New Era, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of China studies, gender and womens studies, and urban studies.
This book explores gender topics related to social transitions and social struggles in the context of the urban transformations accompanying the evolving political economy of Chinas New Era, here defined as the period since 2017.
1. Feminist Explorations of Urban China Part I: Social Transitions:
Contesting the Urban Middle Class
2. Gender Dynamics of Hypergamy: Insights
from Parents in Shanghais Matchmaking Corner
3. Queer Exploration of a
Mobile China: The Transnational Journey of Queer Women from China
4.
Urbanizing Entrepreneurial Women in China: The Chinese State, Female
Entrepreneurs and Urban Redevelopment
5. Anti-Marriage Feminism on Weibo:
Alternative Discursive Space and Obscured Structure of Feeling Part II:
Social Struggles: The Everyday Lives of the Working Class
6. Memory in
Action: Elderly Women Protesting the Demolition of a Temple
7. Spatialized
Emotional Labor and Female Sellers Work in Shanghai: The Case of the W Store
of Ai Brand
8. The Female Genealogies of Grassroots Families: Mother-Daughter
Relationships during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Shanghais Workers New
Villages in the New Era
9. Class and Gender: The Deformation of Urban Space
in Contemporary Chinese Science Fiction
Penn Tsz Ting Ip is Assistant Professor at the Department of Humanities, Language and Translation at the School of Arts and Social Sciences, Hong Kong Metropolitan University, and a core member of the SSHRC-funded partnership project Urbanization, Gender and the Global South: A Transformative Knowledge Network (GenUrb) based at the City Institute, York University, Toronto.