Exploring Women's Urban Narratives in Contemporary Asian Fiction
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71222/n2bd8z46Keywords:
urban narratives, Asian fiction, gender and space, feminist literary analysis, postcolonial citiesAbstract
The rapid urbanization of Asia has transformed its cultural and social landscapes, creating complex narratives that reflect the tensions between tradition and modernity. Contemporary Asian fiction increasingly foregrounds women's perspectives to interrogate these changes, offering nuanced depictions of gendered experiences in urban environments. This study examines how female authors from East and Southeast Asia articulate the intersections of gender, space, and identity in their literary works, addressing gaps in existing scholarship that often marginalizes women's voices in urban literary discourse. Through close readings of selected novels published between 2000 and 2024, including Cho Nam-Joo's Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982 and Duanwad Pimwana's Bright, the analysis highlights recurring themes of alienation, economic survival, and resistance. Employing feminist urban theory and postcolonial frameworks, the paper identifies narrative strategies, such as minimalist prose and magical realism, that subvert patriarchal spatial hierarchies. The findings reveal how these texts reconfigure urban spaces as sites of both oppression and agency, challenging monolithic portrayals of Asian cities. By centering women's narratives, the research contributes to broader conversations about gendered mobility, labor inequities, and literary activism in postcolonial contexts. The study underscores fiction's role in advocating for inclusive urban futures while calling for further intersectional analyses of class, migration, and sexuality in regional literatures.
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