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Sex, city, and the maid: between socialist fantasies and neoliberal parables

Sex, City und die Hausangestellte: zwischen sozialistischen Phantasien und neoliberalen Parabeln
[journal article]

Sun, Wanning

Abstract

Of the many rural migrant workers who go to Chinese cities as cheap labourers, the one who interacts most intimately with urban residents is the domestic servant. In fact, precisely because of this "intimate stranger" status, the figure of the "maid" has captured the imagination of the urban populat... view more

Of the many rural migrant workers who go to Chinese cities as cheap labourers, the one who interacts most intimately with urban residents is the domestic servant. In fact, precisely because of this "intimate stranger" status, the figure of the "maid" has captured the imagination of the urban population. This fascination is evidenced by the plethora of television narratives centring on the fraught relationships between the rural migrant woman and her male employer. This paper analyses a range of television narratives from the genres of dramas and documentaries. It shows that in these narratives, sex functions as the metaphor of social inequality between two social groups. It shows that if we explore how love, romance and marriage are constructed, we may gain some insight into processes of social and ideological contestation in the domain of cultural production.... view less

Keywords
labor migration; social mobility; large city; love; narrative; social inequality; Far East; labor market; marriage; city-country relationship; employer; television series; neoliberalism; phantasy; capacity to work; socialism; woman; domestic; China; documentation

Classification
Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Sociology of Settlements and Housing, Urban Sociology
Media Contents, Content Analysis

Method
qualitative empirical; empirical

Free Keywords
Social sciences; sex; media research; domestic worker; contemporary

Document language
English

Publication Year
2010

Page/Pages
p. 53-69

Journal
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 39 (2010) 4

ISSN
1868-4874

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.