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Gender,media, and myth-making: constructing China’s leftover women
Authors:Hannah Feldshuh
Institution:1. Asian Languages and Cultures, International Relations, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;2. Yenching Academy, Peking University, Beijing, People’s Republic of Chinahfeldshuh@gmail.com
Abstract:In the last 10 years, the term ‘leftover women’ (剩女)—educated, unmarried women over the age of 27—has emerged as a visible stereotype in popular consciousness in China. Despite the surplus of men that is a result of China’s One Child Policy, women are blamed for marriage market challenges through sexist narratives and terminology. While some scholarship treats ‘leftover women’ as an accepted demographic phenomenon with clear causes and impacts, it can also be viewed as an artificial construct created through socially generated gender stereotypes and furthered through media messaging. This article examines and compares sociological research on Chinese marriage patterns, presentations of ‘leftover women’ in contemporary Chinese media, and independent interview findings to understand the role of media in the construction of gender discourse and the perpetuation of gender stereotypes. These rigid concepts of gender roles and ideal womanhood have far-flung consequences, both for women who internalize these misperceptions and for the social hierarchies supported by antiquated gender constructs.
Keywords:Leftover women  gender discourse  marriage practices  sexism  leftover women  femininity in China  media representations
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