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Structures of Affect : Gender and Political Culture in China

Zeng, Jinyan LU and Xu, Xibai (2026) In Queering China: Transnational Genders and Sexualities
Abstract
Structures of Affect: Gender and Political Culture in China examines the central role of affect and gender in shaping personality, community, nationhood and political discourse in contemporary China.

Drawing on (auto)ethnography, interviews, films, podcasts, and cultural and artistic productions from the 2000s to 2025, this book demonstrates how authoritarian rule is sustained through complex affective mechanisms, while also tracing the subtle, everyday forms of affective resistance that emerge within and against these structures.

Proposing 'structures of affect' as its analytical framework, the study investigates how the formative experiences of China's ruling elites cultivated an enduring 'affective attachment' to the... (More)
Structures of Affect: Gender and Political Culture in China examines the central role of affect and gender in shaping personality, community, nationhood and political discourse in contemporary China.

Drawing on (auto)ethnography, interviews, films, podcasts, and cultural and artistic productions from the 2000s to 2025, this book demonstrates how authoritarian rule is sustained through complex affective mechanisms, while also tracing the subtle, everyday forms of affective resistance that emerge within and against these structures.

Proposing 'structures of affect' as its analytical framework, the study investigates how the formative experiences of China's ruling elites cultivated an enduring 'affective attachment' to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), a process that reinforces authoritarian legitimacy. At the same time, it reveals how latent hierarchy, gendered violence and forms of 'affective antagonism' within activist communities have reproduced the very sexism and authoritarian practices that their activism seeks to oppose. Through this examination, the book highlights the practices of affective negotiation at the grassroots level, including Sinophone-Tibetan feminist podcasting, the 'affective queering' of community-making, self-making and solidarity among the younger generation, and the 'affective suffering' captured in cinematic responses to the Russo-Ukrainian War and China's COVID-19 governance.

Ultimately, this book offers a nuanced account of political culture as lived, embodied and emotionally mediated practice. It concludes by advocating a feminist ethics of care and envisioning alternative modes of living and political engagement in repressive contexts, grounded in a transformative affective ethos. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Structures of Affect, China, Gender, Political Culture, Authoritarian Practice, Queering, Feminist, Ethics of Care, Ethos, Activism, Party Family, COVID-19, Russo-Ukraine War, Sinophone-Tibetan, Self-making, Solidarity, Podcasting, Documentary Film, resistance
in
Queering China: Transnational Genders and Sexualities
pages
176 pages
publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN
9781350475045
9781350475021
9781350475052
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e6b414cd-abb4-4b24-b6bf-f327cabc00a1
date added to LUP
2026-03-24 13:43:07
date last changed
2026-04-07 11:11:27
@book{e6b414cd-abb4-4b24-b6bf-f327cabc00a1,
  abstract     = {{Structures of Affect: Gender and Political Culture in China examines the central role of affect and gender in shaping personality, community, nationhood and political discourse in contemporary China.<br/><br/>Drawing on (auto)ethnography, interviews, films, podcasts, and cultural and artistic productions from the 2000s to 2025, this book demonstrates how authoritarian rule is sustained through complex affective mechanisms, while also tracing the subtle, everyday forms of affective resistance that emerge within and against these structures.<br/><br/>Proposing 'structures of affect' as its analytical framework, the study investigates how the formative experiences of China's ruling elites cultivated an enduring 'affective attachment' to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), a process that reinforces authoritarian legitimacy. At the same time, it reveals how latent hierarchy, gendered violence and forms of 'affective antagonism' within activist communities have reproduced the very sexism and authoritarian practices that their activism seeks to oppose. Through this examination, the book highlights the practices of affective negotiation at the grassroots level, including Sinophone-Tibetan feminist podcasting, the 'affective queering' of community-making, self-making and solidarity among the younger generation, and the 'affective suffering' captured in cinematic responses to the Russo-Ukrainian War and China's COVID-19 governance.<br/><br/>Ultimately, this book offers a nuanced account of political culture as lived, embodied and emotionally mediated practice. It concludes by advocating a feminist ethics of care and envisioning alternative modes of living and political engagement in repressive contexts, grounded in a transformative affective ethos.}},
  author       = {{Zeng, Jinyan and Xu, Xibai}},
  isbn         = {{9781350475045}},
  keywords     = {{Structures of Affect; China; Gender; Political Culture; Authoritarian Practice; Queering; Feminist; Ethics of Care; Ethos; Activism; Party Family; COVID-19; Russo-Ukraine War; Sinophone-Tibetan; Self-making; Solidarity; Podcasting; Documentary Film; resistance}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Bloomsbury Academic}},
  series       = {{Queering China: Transnational Genders and Sexualities}},
  title        = {{Structures of Affect : Gender and Political Culture in China}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}