Publication | Closed Access
The empowerment of rural migrant<i>lalas</i>: Contending queerness and heteronormativity in China
27
Citations
29
References
2019
Year
Queer Of Color CritiqueQueer PoliticsFamily MembersHomosexualityEducationQueer TheoryQueer StudySocial SciencesSexual CulturesGender IdentityQueer HistoryGender StudiesContending QueernessIntersectionalityQueer LifeSexual DiversityAlternative SexualityFeminist TheoryLesbian StudyCultureSexuality StudiesQueer StudiesSociologySocial PressuresSexual Orientation
In today’s China, women’s social roles continue to be rigidly associated with gender-based responsibilities that include defending the integrity of their family, entering into heteronormative marriage, and showing reproductive capabilities. Most of those who self-identify as lalas (lesbians) struggle with such issues as self-shaming emotions, disclosing their homosexuality to family members, friends, or colleagues, and dealing with family and social pressures. Within this context, I investigate queerness in a group of young Chinese rural migrant lalas working and living in the industrial area of the Pearl River Delta economic zone in South China. I draw two conclusions. First, rural-to-urban labour migration empowers rural female lalas by providing a measure of economic independence and an escape from patriarchal and homophobic family relations. Second, the integration of traditional (offline and face-to-face) socializing locations and emerging virtual communicative spaces plays an important role in the process through which possibilities of living a queer life are carved out.
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