2015
DOI: 10.1111/jomf.12220
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Between Tradition and Modernity: “Leftover” Women in Shanghai

Abstract: Since the turn of the new millennium, single, educated women in China's major cities

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Cited by 166 publications
(117 citation statements)
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“…Two particular groups of women are vulnerable to such inequity: never-married working women and female divorcées are especially subject to gender discrimination and even ridicule. Single career women, particularly those with high incomes, age 27 or older, are labeled 'leftover' (shengnü), and stigmatized for their unmarried status (Ji 2015;Gaetano 2010;Hong Fincher 2014). The government, the media, and even their own families mock them for being 'too picky' in their choice of a partner.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two particular groups of women are vulnerable to such inequity: never-married working women and female divorcées are especially subject to gender discrimination and even ridicule. Single career women, particularly those with high incomes, age 27 or older, are labeled 'leftover' (shengnü), and stigmatized for their unmarried status (Ji 2015;Gaetano 2010;Hong Fincher 2014). The government, the media, and even their own families mock them for being 'too picky' in their choice of a partner.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, a number of important questions are left unanswered. In China, is remarriage an "incomplete" institution (Cherlin 1978(Cherlin , 2004, which is regulated to a lesser extent by the norms that encourage homogamous pairings, such as "marriages of matching doors" (Hu 2016b;Ji 2015;Lui 2016)? If a lack of marital mobility reinforces socioeconomic inequality (Schwartz 2013), does assortative mating in remarriage help mitigate social inequality by reducing social boundaries, or exacerbate inequality by reinforcing socioeconomic segregation?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chinese people have long upheld the tradition of "marriages of matching doors" (men dang hu dui): Parents prefer that their adult children marry someone of a similar socioeconomic status (Hu 2016b;Lui 2016), and such preferences in turn shape adult children's spouse selection, through socialization and parental intervention (Ji 2015;Qian and Qian 2014;Riley 1994). In the past few decades the increasing prevalence of educational homogamy has contributed to growing inter-household earnings inequality in urban China (Hu and Qian 2015).…”
Section: Theorizing Assortative Matingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While marriage continues to mark women's entry into adulthood throughout China (Ji, 2015), there are significant differences between rural and urban contexts. As Gaetano (2004) explains, 'the centrality of marriage in rural women's life course means that parents and daughters alike wish to maintain the young woman's good reputation' (p. 49).…”
Section: Norms Governing Singlehood and Marriage In Rural And Urban Cmentioning
confidence: 99%