Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/40957
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Type: Journal article
Title: Unruly spaces: gender, women's writing and Indigenous feminism in China
Author: Song, X.
Schaffer, K.
Citation: Journal of Gender Studies, 2007; 16(1):17-30
Publisher: Carfax Publishing
Issue Date: 2007
ISSN: 0958-9236
1465-3869
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Kay Schaffer and Song Xianlin
Abstract: Since the 1995 Beijing Women's Conference contemporary women's writing in China has been a privileged site for the exploration of gender relations and female specificity. After defining a specifically indigenous Chinese feminism, this paper studies four directions in women's writing that impact upon feminist practice: rural women's stories that encourage advocacy for women's rights; new historical fiction that challenges the established representations of women in history; popular novels and blog sites by urban women that sexually subvert traditions; and poststructuralist 'personalised writing' that disengages from male-centred discourse and explores women's radical alterity. We argue that these writings give rise to many sites of activism, not only for Chinese women in urban and rural areas, but also for Chinese women's involvement in trans-global feminist networks and cross-cultural exchanges. Chinese feminists today, through the medium of creative writing, articulate a new politics of difference, refracted through English-speaking and European theories, but adapted to local traditions, histories and regional affiliations, directed toward an indigenous, Chinese-style of feminism with expansive possibilities and an array of indeterminate outcomes.
Keywords: China
women's writing
feminism
advocacy
globalisation
modernity
DOI: 10.1080/09589230601116125
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09589230601116125
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 6
Gender Studies and Social Analysis publications

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