Leftover Women: The Resurgence of Gender Inequality in China
Leta Hong Fincher. Zed (Palgrave MacMillan, dist.), $24.95 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-1-78032-921-5
Journalist Hong Fincher, a doctoral candidate at Tsinghua University, describes a state-sponsored backlash against economically independent single women in urban China, and the growing wealth gap it enforces, in this highly suggestive study. Drawing on secondary sources, statistics, and original research (grounded in interviews, an examination of state media, and publications from state organizations), the author spotlights a state-generated propaganda campaign to stigmatize "leftover" women%E2%80%94those as young as 26 who have not yet married. While part of a larger agenda to promote demographic goals and social stability, notes Hong Fincher, this caricature of women who supposedly prefer career over family speaks to their relative gains and hides efforts to reverse those gains through strategies such as hiring discrimination. Because the vast majority of family homes are owned in the husband's name, married women have a disproportionately small claim on China's booming housing market. Traditional gender roles and inadequate legal protections combine, moreover, to leave women vulnerable to domestic violence. However, the author highlights historical precedents and exceptions to this authoritarian patriarchal rule, as well as examples of resistance. The book serves as a vital introduction to gender issues in urban China. (May)
Details
Reviewed on: 06/02/2014
Genre: Nonfiction