This book offers the first ethnographic account of the experiences of highly educated young professional women, hailed by the Chinese media as ¿white-collar beauties¿. It exposes the organizational mechanisms ¿ naturalization, objectification and commodification of women ¿ that wield gendered and sexual control in post-Mao workplaces. Whilst men benefit from symbolic and bureaucratic power, women professionals skilfully enact indirect power in a game of domination and resistance. The sources of women¿s subversion are grounded in their only-child upbringing which breaks the patrilineal base of familial patriarchy fostering an unprecedented ambition in personal development, gender as inherently relational and a role-oriented system, and inner-outer cultural boundaries as signifiers of moral agency. This raises a new feminist inquiry about the agents for social change. Through a nuanced analysis grounded in the socio-cultural locality, this book throws fresh light upon the ways in which gender, sexuality and power could be theorized beyond a Euro-American reality.
Chapter 1. Becoming White Collar Beauties in Urban China.- Chapter 2. Toward a Local Feminist Understanding of Gender and Sexuality.- Chapter 3. The Weaker Sex.- Chapter 4. Sex in Work.- Chapter 5. Sex as Work.- Chapter 6. Sisterhood.- Chapter 7. Marriage, Family and Divorce.
Jieyu Liu is Deputy Director of the SOAS China Institute, SOAS University of London, UK. In 2015, she was awarded a five-year European Research Council grant to examine family and sexual relations in East Asia.