Producing Gendered Migration Narratives in China: A Case Study of <i>Dagongmei Tongxun</i> by a Local NGO

Authors

  • Siyuan Yin Department of Communication, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Keywords:

rural-to-urban women migrants, nongovernmental organization, China, cultural production, migration narratives

Abstract

This article offers a case study of a periodic publication, Dagongmei Tongxun, produced by local Chinese nongovernmental organization Rural Women Knowing All. Dagongmei Tongxun publishes articles regarding life and working situations of rural-to-urban women migrants (dagongmei) in Beijing. I apply Bourdieu’s field theory to analyze the ways Dagongmei Tongxun shapes the field of migration narratives. Drawing on interviews with the organization’s staff members, discourse analysis of the publication’s articles, and the state discourses of dagongmei, I argue that the publication of Dagongmei Tongxun is an institutionally bounded political and cultural project. Entitling women migrants to authorship is a political intervention that mobilizes often-silenced women as active agents in producing gendered migration narratives. Whereas the state discourses still tend to objectify and marginalize dagongmei, narratives by women migrants themselves present their diverse subjectivities and complex life situations. At the same time, the publication’s advocating discourses fail to confront hegemonic ideologies that underpin unequal power structures.

Author Biography

Siyuan Yin, Department of Communication, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Siyuan is currently a Ph.D candidate at University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and her research interests include feminism, critical cultural studies and political economy of communication. Specifically, Siyuan studies women’s rights and social inequalities in China. Before coming to UMass, Siyuan held her M.A. in Communication from University of Illinois and B.A. in Journalism from Peking University.

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Published

2016-08-29

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Articles