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Title
Holding up half the sky: a feminist investigation into the making of the Chinese urban female entrepreneur
Feminist investigation into the making of the Chinese urban female entrepreneur
Description
This dissertation focused on the links among micro-enterprise development (MD), social capital building, and the accompanying social lives of Chinese female entrepreneurs in two China's urban areas—Nanjing and Haikou. It engaged with a few important discussions concerning China’s liberal politics during the reform era, the global trend of neo-liberal capitalism, and the social construction of a new worker-subject—the Chinese urban female entrepreneur shaped by the hybrid marriage of state politics and global capital. The research findings from this research project contributed to the tradition of feminist theories, which endeavors to explore the relationship between neo-liberalism and gender. In particular, gender was found to concretize the ways in which neo-liberal ideological forces have attempted to capture and exploit the productivity of women’s labor
Drawing upon the data from in-depth interviews, participatory observations, and secondary data gathering, I examined the diffusion of the Western-centric concept and phenomena of social capital building in order to answer the question how Chinese women's life was inscribed in the larger context of China's relationship to global capitalism. My research findings manifested that the respondents considered affections (e.g., inter-dependence, obligation, and mutual trust) to be the foundation of establishing and maintaining their social networks regardless of the government's emphasis on market principles and the utility-based social capital conception. This opened up a new way of re-theorizing social capital. This dissertation also focused on how China’s integration with the global economy has affected women’s social identity construction. It emphasized the interaction between gender and class as one of the most salient sites where ideal citizens of China are imagined. Drawing from the perspectives of the respondents, I found that femininity has never been eliminated by the Chinese government. It has existed in China’s MD to challenge the government’s attempt of promoting the agendered (gender-neutral), universal model of women’s participation in self-employment. Moreover, I asserted that class was individualized while penetrating into other dimensions of identity (especially gender). The transformed dimensions of identity constituted a set of stratification schemes that constantly reshuffled social stratifications for maximizing the state’s profits from the control of citizens.
Drawing upon the data from in-depth interviews, participatory observations, and secondary data gathering, I examined the diffusion of the Western-centric concept and phenomena of social capital building in order to answer the question how Chinese women's life was inscribed in the larger context of China's relationship to global capitalism. My research findings manifested that the respondents considered affections (e.g., inter-dependence, obligation, and mutual trust) to be the foundation of establishing and maintaining their social networks regardless of the government's emphasis on market principles and the utility-based social capital conception. This opened up a new way of re-theorizing social capital. This dissertation also focused on how China’s integration with the global economy has affected women’s social identity construction. It emphasized the interaction between gender and class as one of the most salient sites where ideal citizens of China are imagined. Drawing from the perspectives of the respondents, I found that femininity has never been eliminated by the Chinese government. It has existed in China’s MD to challenge the government’s attempt of promoting the agendered (gender-neutral), universal model of women’s participation in self-employment. Moreover, I asserted that class was individualized while penetrating into other dimensions of identity (especially gender). The transformed dimensions of identity constituted a set of stratification schemes that constantly reshuffled social stratifications for maximizing the state’s profits from the control of citizens.
Date Created
2015
Contributors
- Zhang, Dongling (Author)
- Jurik, Nancy (Thesis advisor)
- Quan, H.L.T. (Thesis advisor)
- Mackinnon, Stephen (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Sociology
- Women's Studies
- Political Science
- Chinese Urban Female Entrepreneurs
- Chinese Women and Labor
- Micro-enterprise Development
- Micro-enterprise Development Programs
- Neo-liberal China
- Women's Self-employment
- Businesswomen--China--Nanjing Shi.
- Businesswomen
- Businesswomen--China--Haikou Shi.
- Businesswomen
- Small business--China--Nanjing Shi.
- Small Business
- Small business--China--Haikou Shi.
- Small Business
Geographic Subject
Resource Type
Extent
vii, 196 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29794
Statement of Responsibility
by Dongling Zhang
Description Source
Viewed on April 16, 2020
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2015
Field of study: Sociology
System Created
- 2015-06-01 08:07:55
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:29:32
- 3 years 2 months ago
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