Coming out and going abroad: The chuguo mobility of queer women in China

    Research output: Chapter in book/report/conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    This article is part of a research project that explores the movement of queer women (lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer identified) from China to Australia and other Western countries. The research is based on participant observation and interviews that were conducted in selected cities in China and Australia. This article centers on queer women’s narratives and experiences of going abroad, chuguo. Economic and social transformations in China have given rise to a new class of mobile urbanites. Going abroad has become a preferred life plan for young elites and the single child generation from urban, middle-class family backgrounds. The author looks at how mobility, sexuality, and gender non-conformity are intertwined in queer women’s crafting of their life aspirations, and how the normative aspiration of chuguo in contemporary China enables (and disables) new ways of living and being. Building on the author’s previous theorization of the “politics of public correctness,” it is argued that transnational mobility has become a new homonormative value, which interplays with the neoliberal desire to be a mobile cosmopolitan subject in post-socialist China.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationLives That Resist Telling
    Subtitle of host publicationMigrant and Refugee Lesbians
    EditorsEithne Luibhéid
    PublisherRoutledge (Taylor & Francis Group)
    Chapter5
    Pages126-139
    Number of pages14
    ISBN (Electronic)9781003142171
    ISBN (Print)9780367695361
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 16 Mar 2021

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