412
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Articles

In the Middle of Two Separated Yet Overlapped Spheres: Rural Nannies in Shanghai

, &

References

  • Anderson, B. 2000. Doing the Dirty Work: The Global Politics of Domestic Labor. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Apple, R. D. 1995. “Constructing Mothers: Scientific Motherhood in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.” Social History of Medicine 8 (2): 161–78.
  • Bakan, A. B. and D. K. Stasiulis. 1995. Not One of the Family: Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Chan, K. W., T. Liu, and Y. Y. Yang. 1999. “Hukou and Non-Hukou Migration in China: Comparisons and Contrasts.” International Journal of Population Geography 5 (6): 425–48.
  • Chen, B. and Z. Sun. 1983. Domestic Workers Social Role-Survey of Some Intellectual Family in Shanghai.” Chinese Journal of Sociology 10 (5): 34–37 [ in Chinese].
  • Chin, C.B. N. 1997. “Walls of Silence and Late Twentieth Century Representations of the Foreign Female Domestic Workers: The Case of Filipina and Indonesian Female Servants in Malaysia.” International Migration Review 31 (2): 353–85.
  • Christopher, K. 2012. “Extensive Mothering: Employed Mothers’ Constructions of the Good Mother.” Gender and Society 26 (1): 73–96.
  • Cohen, P. 1991. “Coping Strategies of Live-In Domestic Workers.” Qualitative Sociology 14 (2): 155–70.
  • Cook, S. and X. Y. Dong. 2011. “Harsh Choices: Chinese Women’s Paid Work and Unpaid Care Responsibilities Under Economic Reform.” Development and Change 42 (4): 947–65.
  • Cox, R. and P. Watt. 2002. “Globalization, Polarization and the Informal Sector: The Case of Paid Domestic Workers in London.” Area 34 (1): 39–47.
  • Dally, A. 1982. Inventing Motherhood: The Consequences of an Ideal. London: Burnett Books.
  • England, P. 2010. “The Gender Revolution: Uneven and Stalled.” Gender and Society 24 (2): 149–66.
  • Everingham, C. 1994. Motherhood and Modernity: An Investigation into the Rational Dimension of Mothering. Berkshire: Open University Press.
  • Fan, C. 1999. “Migration in a Socialist Transitional Economy: Heterogeneity, Socioeconomic and Spatial Characteristics of Migrants in China and Guangdong Province.” International Migration Review 33 (4): 954–60.
  • Guo, H. 2009. “The Identity of Domestic Workers and Their Political Union Rights-A Case Study of a Domestic Workers’ Union in Xi’an.” Collection of Women’s Studies 96 (6): 16–21 [in Chinese].
  • Hays, S. 1998. The Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  • He, J. 2014. “Family Education Support Policies in France, and United States and Japan.” Journal of China Women’s University 50 (2): 100–106 [in Chinese].
  • He, J. and Y. Jiang. 2008. “On the Chinese Child-care Policy and Situation: From the View of Supporting Women to Reconcile Work and Family Responsibilities.” Studies in Early Childhood Education 164 (8): 3–6 [ in Chinese].
  • Hochschild, A. and A. Machung. 2012. The Second Shift: Working Families and the Revolution at Home. London: Penguin Books.
  • Jacka, T. 2006. Rural Women in Urban China: Gender, Migrant and Social Change. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
  • Ji, Y. 2015a. “Asian Families at the Crossroads: A Meeting of East, West, Tradition, Modernity, and Gender.” Journal of Marriage and Family 77 (5): 1031–8.
  • –––. 2015b. “Between Tradition and Modernity: ‘Leftover’ Women in Shanghai.” Journal of Marriage and Family 77 (5): 1057–73.
  • Ji, Y., X. Wu, S. Sun, and G He. 2017. “Unequal Care, Unequal Work: Toward a More Comprehensive Understanding of Gender Inequality in Post-Reform Urban China.” Sex Roles 77 (11): 765–78.
  • Ji, Y. and J. Yeung. 2014. “Heterogeneity in Contemporary Chinese Marriage.” Journal of Family Issues 35 (12): 1662–682.
  • Jin, Y. and D. Yang. 2015. “Coming into the Times of ‘Competing Mothers in Educational Field’: The Popularity of Parentocracy and Reconstruction of Motherhood.” Nanjing Journal of Social Sciences 45 (2): 61–67 [ in Chinese].
  • Kyung, L. J. 1999. “The Glorification of ‘Scientific Motherhood’ as an Ideological Construct in Modern Korea.” Asian Journal of Women’s Studies 5 (4): 9–27.
  • Lan, P. C. 2003. “Maid or Madam? Filipina Migrant Workers and the Continuity of Domestic Labor.” Gender and Society 17 (2): 187–208.
  • –––. 2006. Global Cinderellas: Migrants Domestics and Newly Rich Employers in Taiwan. Durham, NC: Duck University Press.
  • Luan, X. and J. Zou. 2017. “Investigating Domestic Work in Shanghai: The Employer Worried About Finding a Reliable Nanny While the Nanny Worried About No Insurance on Sick Time.” Pengpai News, May 29. http://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_1668109 [in Chinese].
  • Lutz, H. 2008. “When Home Becomes a Workplace: Domestic Work as an Ordinary Job in Germany?” In Migration and Domestic Work: a European Perspective on a Global Theme, edited by H. Lutz, 43–60. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Ministry of Education. 2007. Educational Statistical Yearbook of China. Beijing: China Statistics Press.
  • Parreñas, R. S. 2000. “Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers and the International Division of Reproductive Labor.” Gender and Society 14 (4): 560–80.
  • –––. 2001. “Transgressing the Nation-State: The Partial Citizenship and ‘Imagined Global Community’ of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers.” Globalization and Gender 26 (4): 1129–54.
  • Parreñas, R. S. 2015. Servants of Globalization: Women, Migration and Domestic Work. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Pun, N. 2004. “Women Workers and Precarious Employment in Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, China.” Gender and Development 12 (2): 29–36.
  • Pun, N. and C. Smith. 2007. “Putting Transnational Labor Process in Its Place: The Dormitory Labor Regime in Post-socialist China.” Work, Employment and Society 21 (1): 27–45.
  • Simons, C. 1987. “They Get by with a Lot of Help from Their Kyoiku-Mamas: How the Supermoms of Japan Shape Their Children’s Education.” Smithsonian 17 (12): 44.
  • Song, S. 2011. “The Private Embedded in the Public: The State’s Discourse on Domestic Work, 1949-1966.” Research on Women in Modern Chinese History 19:131–72 [in Chinese].
  • –––. 2012. “From Visible to Invisible: Housework in the Collectivist Period 1949-1966.” Jiangsu Social Sciences 1:116–25 [in Chinese].
  • Stasiulis, D. and A. B. Bakan. 1997. “Negotiating Citizenship: The Case of Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada.” Feminist review 57 (1): 112–39.
  • Su, Y. 2011. “Labor Control and Resistance: The Dynamics Between Employers and Domestic Workers in the Labor Process of Domestic Work.” Chinese Journal of Sociology 31 (6): 178–205 [in Chinese].
  • –––. 2016. “Gender Analysis of the Emotional Labor of Baby-Caring Domestic Workers: CX Domestic Work Company in Shanghai.” Collection of Women’s Studies 137 (5): 17–24.
  • Sun, S. and F. Chen. 2015. “Reprivatized Womanhood: Changes in Mainstream Media’s Framing of Urban Women’s Issues in China, 1995–2012.” Journal of Marriage and Family 77 (5): 1091–107.
  • Sun, W. 2008. Maid in China: Media, Morality, and the Cultural Politics of Boundaries. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Tao, Y. 2015. “Representation of Motherhood in a Popular Maternal Magazine.” Collection of Women’s Studies. 129 (3): 75–84 [in Chinese].
  • –––. 2016. “Idealizing Motherhood: Construction of Parenting in a Transitional Society.” Collection of Women’s Studies 137 (5): 25–37 [in Chinese].
  • Thorne, B. 1982. “Feminist Rethinking of the Family: An overview.” In Rethinking the Family: Some Feminist Questions, edited by B. Thorne and M. Yalom, 1–24. New York and London: Longman.
  • Tong, X. and Hang, S. 2011. “Transition of Nurturance Pattern of Pre-school Children and Women with Jobs.” Journal of China Women’s University 23 (1): 104–6 [ in Chinese].
  • Yan, H. 2008. New Masters, New Servants: Migration, Development, and Women Workers in China. California: Duke University Press.
  • Yan, H. 2010. “The Burdens of the Intelligentsia’ and Domestic Work.” Open Times, 23 (6): 102–20 [in Chinese].
  • Yeoh, B.S. A., S. Huang., and J. Gonzalez. 1999. “Migrant Female Domestic Workers: Debating the Economic, Social and Political Impacts in Singapore.” International Migration Review 33 (1): 114–36.
  • Yeoh, B.S. A. and S. Huang. 2000. “‘Home’ and ‘Away’: Foreign Domestic Workers and Negotiations of Diasporic Identity in Singapore.” Women’s Studies International Forum 23 (4): 413–29.
  • Zhang, L. and A. Xu. 2011. “The Rights Protection and Social Support for Domestic Workers––An Example Form Household Service in Shanghai.” Journal of Social Science 23 (2): 83–90 [in Chinese].
  • Zhao, Y. 2009. “Investigation on Family Nannies in Chengdu.” Population and Development 15 (4): 76–81 [in Chinese].
  • Zuo, J. and Y. Jiang. 2009. Urban Women’s Work and Family in Social Transition. Beijing: Contemporary China Publishing House [in Chinese].
  • Zhou, M. Q., C. J. Zhu, and C. Nyland. 1999. “The Institution of Hukou-Based Social Exclusion: A Unique Institution Reshaping the Characteristics of Contemporary Urban China.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 38 (4): 1437–57.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.