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Female warriors: A reproduction of patriarchal narrative of Hua Mulan in The Red Detachment of Women (1972)

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 13:57 authored by Zhuying Li
During the Chinese Cultural Revolution, the CCP officially claimed that Chinese women achieved an equal position as men, and the Confucian patriarchal family was deconstructed. This article is an ongoing exploration of Maoist gender discourse by analysing the image of female warriors in the revolutionary opera film, The Red Detachment of Women (1972) which was made and popularised during the Cultural Revolution. This article finds that Maoist gender discourse failed to deconstruct the Confucian patriarchy. The image of female warriors in the revolutionary opera films was a reproduction of the patriarchal narrative of Hua Mulan, which served an ethical symbol of loyalty and filial daughter in the discourse of Confucian patriarchy. Similar to Mulan, the masculinised image of female warriors in the revolutionary opera films cannot be identified as a feminist representation yet a cultural and ethical symbol of filial daughter that leads to women’s subordination to men’s needs.

History

Journal

Media International Australia

Volume

176

Issue

1

Start page

66

End page

77

Total pages

12

Publisher

Sage

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2020.

Former Identifier

2006101909

Esploro creation date

2021-05-01

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