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Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China

Book

Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China

DOI link for Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China

Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China book

Becoming a 'Modern' Man

Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China

DOI link for Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China

Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China book

Becoming a 'Modern' Man
ByXiaodong Lin
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2013
eBook Published 5 April 2013
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203590904
Pages 168
eBook ISBN 9780203590904
Subjects Area Studies, Social Sciences
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Lin, X. (2013). Gender, Modernity and Male Migrant Workers in China: Becoming a 'Modern' Man (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203590904

ABSTRACT

Rural-urban migration within China has transformed and reshaped rural people’s lives during the past few decades, and has been one of the most visible phenomena of the economic reforms enacted since the late 1970s. Whilst Feminist scholars have addressed rural women’s experience of struggle and empowerment in urban China, in contrast, research on rural men’s experience of migration is a neglected area of study. In response, this book seeks to address the absence of male migrant workers as a gendered category within the current literature on rural-urban migration.

Examining Chinese male migrant workers’ identity formation, this book explores their experience of rural-urban migration and their status as an emerging sector of a dislocated urban working class. It seeks to understand issues of gender and class through the rural migrant men’s narratives within the context of China’s modernization, and provides an in-depth analysis of how these men make sense of their new lives in the rapidly modernizing, post-Mao China with its emphasis on progress and development. Further, this book uses the men’s own narratives to challenge the elite assumption that rural men’s low status is a result of their failure to adopt a modern urban identity and lifestyle. Drawing on interviews with 28 male rural migrants, Xiaodong Lin unpacks the gender politics of Chinese men and masculinities, and in turn contributes to a greater understanding of global masculinities in an international context.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars working in the fields of Chinese culture and society, gender studies, migration studies, sociology and social anthropology.

Shortlisted for this year's BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Representing ‘peasant workers’

chapter 3|34 pages

Leaving home and being a ‘filial son’

chapter 4|27 pages

‘Father–son’ relations and/or becoming urban working-class

chapter 5|11 pages

Conclusion: Becoming a ‘modern’ man

chapter 6|8 pages

Postscript: Youth, aspirations and masculinities

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