This paper examines changing representations of women in Chinese television dramas
since the early 1990s and interprets them within a framework of global socialist media
cultures, considering both domestic developments and transnational trends. Drawing on
the analysis of three selected dramas, it traces the trajectory of televised femininity from
exemplary socialist worker-citizens devoted to family and community, to more
individualized middle-class urbanites. It is tempting to see this transformation as an
outcome of China’s integration into the global capitalist economy, the attendant retreat
of the party-state from the private realm, and the infusion of Western cultural gender
ideals. Yet this interpretation downplays important continuities, and misses intriguing
parallels with TV dramas produced in socialist Eastern Europe. The argument pays
particular attention to the enduring appeal of the socialist-style superwoman who
shoulders the double burden of a professional career and unpaid domestic work while
also acting as a discerning citizen-consumer.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies
Published in
Feminist Media Histories
Volume
5
Issue
3
Pages
36-59
Citation
WANG, Y. and MIHELJ, S., 2019. A socialist superwoman for the new era: Chinese television and the changing ideals of femininity. Feminist Media Histories, 5 (3), pp.36-59.