Abstract
How does gender shape the experience and imaginaries of self-realisation? This article explores practices of self-improvement among young women in China, namely workshops for interpersonal skills. These practices direct participants to express themselves as autonomous persons, disembedded from social hierarchies and familial responsibilities. Unmarried women who attend workshops conceive of marriage as an unavoidable impediment to their self-realisation. This is due to a prevailing gender inequality in marriage, as well as the ongoing expansion of an ideal of individual autonomy in China through economic reforms. In this article, I do not centre my analysis on a cultural clash between this ideal and local cultural practices. Instead, it is the possibility of this ideal, which is always shaped and restricted by socio-economic imperatives, that induces women’s frustration with their local culture. The fact that this ideal promises universal attainment highlights for women the gender roles that limit their autonomy.
Acknowledgements
This research has been conducted through the financial assistance of the Carlyle Greenwell Bequest Postgraduate Research Fund for students of anthropology at the University of Sydney. I would like to thank Sohoon Lee for her comments on an earlier version of this article, Phil Le Couilliard for his linguistic assistance and two anonymous reviewers for their invaluable suggestions.
ORCID
Gil Hizi http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7567-0875