Women and Provincial Change: Gender Histories Across China
MTA
Women's lives, labor, and power in provincial contexts — one province per chapter
This book offers a provincial‑by‑provincial examination of women’s lives, labor, and power across China, arguing that gender is forged not only by national law or global markets but in the specific ecological, industrial, and institutional settings of each region. Through twenty‑five case studies—from Anhui’s migrant daughters and care chains to Fujian’s lineage‑based entrepreneurship, from Gansu’s arid‑frontier resilience to Guangdong’s dagongmei factory workforce—the volume shows how local histories of kinship, resource extraction, trade routes, and state‑sector change produce distinctive gender norms and opportunities. Each chapter traces long arcs from late imperial agrarian regimes through socialist collectivization, reform‑era marketization, and the rise of service, digital, and gig economies, highlighting how women negotiate marriage, mobility, and care amid shifting labor regimes and governance practices.
Three analytical threads run throughout: household political economy (how families pool income, allocate care, and deploy kin networks); labor‑regime change (the movement from state‑owned enterprises to township‑and‑village industries, export‑oriented factories, and digital entrepreneurship); and the mediation of national policies by local cadres, NGOs, and women’s federations, which creates provincial variations in access to justice, social insurance, and collective voice. Together these threads reveal how gender orders are both stabilized and unsettled by the interaction of markets, states, and communities, and how migration binds sending and receiving provinces through remittances, left‑behind caregiving, and new aspirations for education and entrepreneurship.
The book’s methodological blend of archival research, ethnographic fieldwork, oral histories, and statistical data allows it to present both macro‑level patterns and micro‑level vignettes—such as a Anhui seamstress livestreaming mushroom sales, a Fujian basket weaver exporting to Singapore, or a Shanxi coal‑miner’s wife managing silicosis care—thereby grounding broad trends in lived experience. It avoids celebratory or lamenting tones, instead documenting the complexity and agency of women as they navigate constraints, seize openings, and craft forms of power that are legible locally yet resonant nationally. The resulting mosaic underscores that China’s gender history is not a monolith but a set of provincially specific trajectories that together shape the nation’s ongoing transformation.
This book is essential reading for scholars and students in gender studies, Chinese history, sociology, and anthropology who seek a nuanced, place-based understanding of how women's lives are shaped by regional economies, migration, and policy. It will also appeal to policymakers, development practitioners, and NGO workers focused on rural development, labor rights, and gender equity in China. General readers interested in women's lived experiences across China's diverse provinces—and how local histories intersect with national transformations—will find this comparative, empirically rich account both accessible and deeply illuminating.
June 13, 2026
52,483 words
3 hours 41 minutes
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