Remaking “Women” and Contemporary Chinese Feminism——Based on The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism

Authors

  • Shanjie Zhu College of Liberal Arts, Shanghai University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30564/ret.v3i3.2093

Abstract

The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism gives an historical retrospective of China in the past 100 years with a 20th century global perspective, probes about in-depth and multi-level Chinese women and contemporary social problems by tracing the evolution of the left-wing ideological context, and elaborates on the remaking of “women” creatively by virtue of the historical heritage of socialism. It is of great significance in responding to new changes and new issues taking place in contemporary Chinese feminism. For instance, in today’s China, while analyzing gender equality, people have to focus not only on the relationship between the sexes, but on development within women’s groups and on relations among class/strata also. Therefore, remaking “women” and how to remake “women”, in the Chinese context today, are important issues to feminists, as they will tell, to a certain extent, if gender studies can effectively respond to social issues in contemporary China.  

Keywords:

Remaking “women”; Left-wing thought; Feminism; Contemporary China

References

[1] Li Yinhe(2005), Feminism, Jinan: Shandong People's Publishing Press: 27.

[2] Tani Barlow (2012), The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism, (tran.) Shen Qiqi, Shanghai: Shanghai People’s Publishing Press: 63-77.

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[4] Liang Qichao (2006), “New Citizen,” (ed.) Yi Xinding, Liang Qichao Selections, Beijing: China Federation of Literary and Art Circles Publishing Press: 588-678.

[5] Lin Chun; Liu Bohong and Jin Yihong (2004), “Study on the School of Chinese Feminism,” (ed.) Qiu Renzong, Feminism Philosophy and Public Policy, Beijing: China Social Sciences Press: 96-97.

[6] Min Dongchao and Liu Weiwei (2010), “Question, Challenge, Reflection –From Gender Equity to Gender Justice,” Collection of Women’s Studies, 5:5-11.

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[8] Tong Xin (2010), “Labor Market, Gender and Social Stratification,” Collection of Women’s Studies, 9:12-19.

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