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The Gender of Communication: Changing Expectations of Mothers and Daughters in Urban China*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2010
Abstract
In the flow of the material, cultural and moral influences shaping contemporary Chinese society, individual desires for emotional communication are reconstituting the meaning of the subject, self and responsibility. This article draws on fieldwork conducted in Beijing between 2000 and 2004 to discuss the gendered dimensions of this process through an analysis of the implications of the “communicative intimacy” sought by mothers and daughters in their mutual relationship. What could be termed a “feminization of intimacy” is the effect of two distinct but linked processes: on the one hand, a market-supported naturalization of women's roles, and on the other, the changing subjective articulation of women's needs, desires and expectations of family and personal relationships. I argue that across these two processes, the celebration of a communicative intimacy does not signify the emergence of more equal family or gender relationships, as recent theories about the individualization and cultural democratization of daily life in Western societies have argued. As families and kin groups, communities and neighbourhoods are physically, spatially and socially broken up, and as gender differences in employment and income increase, media and “expert” encouragement to mothers to become the all-round confidantes, educators and moral guides of their children affirms women's responsibilities in the domestic sphere. Expectations of mother–daughter communication reshape the meaning – and experience – of the individual subject in the changing character of the urban family at the same time as they reinforce ideas about women's gendered attributes and the responsibilities associated with them.
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References
1 I describe this conversation in greater detail in The Subject of Gender: Daughter and Mothers in Urban China (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), pp. 70–71Google Scholar.
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8 My focus is not on the state in its various external and internal effects on subject formation, but I should point out that my reference to the state does not presuppose a uniform, let alone monolithic entity. Sara Friedman discusses this in her analysis of the relationship between state power and subject formation in the intimate lives of women in Hui'an county, south-eastern China, using a Foucaultian notion of governmentality. Friedman, Sara L., “The intimacy of state power: marriage, liberation and the socialist subjects in southeastern China,” American Ethnologist, Vol.32, No. 2 (2005), pp. 312–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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31 See also ibid. p. 53.
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33 See e.g. Wei Junyi who noted women's “natural duty” (tianran yiwu) to bear children, in “Yang haizi shi fou fang'ai jinbu?” (“Does bringing up children impede progress?”), Zhongguo qingnian, No. 21 (1953), pp. 13–14, quoted in Evans, Harriet, Women and Sexuality in China: Discourse of Female Sexuality and Gender since 1949 (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997), p.122Google Scholar.
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38 Gill Jones noted that many young people felt that they could talk more easily with their parents once they left home, and once they no longer needed to negotiate their independence within their parents’ household; see Jones, Gill, Leaving Home (Buckingham: Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 74Google Scholar.
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44 See e.g. the associations between women's emotionality and the dangers of passion in Jia, Luo, “Feizao pao si de aiqing” (“Soap bubble love”), Zhongguo funü (Women of China), No. 4 (1955), pp. 8–9Google Scholar.
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47 Evans, The Subject of Gender, pp. 92–93.
48 In response to a question about which parent daughters turned to first to talk about their “problems,” 82.65% of the 1,020 mothers who responded to the survey answered “me.” Cited in ibid. p. 93.
49 Wuliu, Si, “Mama yongyuan shi nüer de baohu shen” (“Mother is always her daughter's guardian spirit”), Zhongguo funü, No. 5 (1999), p. 10Google Scholar, quoted in ibid. p. 93.
50 In the UK, the logic of neo-liberal market economies has sustained wide gender differentials in income, employment and the division of domestic labour. A recent 700-page report on “How Fair is Britain” published on 11 October 2010 by the UK's Equality and Human Rights Commission on discrimination and disadvantage in Britain delivered a devastating critique of the continuing widespread gender divisions in British society. The culture of “disclosing intimacy” shaping expectations of family and interpersonal relationships does not, so it appears, lead to any automatic diminution of gender equalities.
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52 The survey data were collected from 48,401 urban households across China's 35 largest cities in 1999 and are analysed in Cohen, P. N. and Feng, Wang, “The market and gender pay equity: have Chinese reforms narrowed the gap?” in Davis, Deborah S. and Feng, Wang (eds.), Creating Wealth and Poverty in Post-Socialist China (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2009), pp. 37–53Google Scholar. Significantly, the authors of this article point out that as in developed capitalist economies, “gender bias [in pay] also could be expressed through an increasing tendency to relegate women to more nurturing roles, whether by families or by employers” (p. 52).
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55 My thanks go to Gail Hershatter for this formulation.
56 Hird, Derek, “Models of masculinity? White-collar images at work in contemporary China,” in Donald, S. Hemelryk, Schilbach, T. and Cucco, I. (eds.), Other Stories/Missing Histories: Reflections from the Jiu Year in China (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, forthcoming 2010)Google Scholar; Derek Hird, “White-collar men and masculinities in contemporary urban China,” unpublished PhD thesis, University of Westminster, 2009.
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