Gender and sexuality
Abstract
The dynamism seen in contemporary Asia has a deep gender
dimension.
Rapid economic changes have fundamentally challenged the
traditional division of labour of women working in the private, family
domain and men in the public sphere of commerce and politics. Greater
participation by women in politics has reshaped agendas for social
change.
The seemingly fixed images of masculinity and femininity are in
flux, accelerated by the commercialisation of popular culture across the
region. Although the LGBT community is still struggling to gain wider
acceptance, it has made strides that have challenged the hegemonic status
of heteronormativity.
In the area of body politics, where the state and religious groups still
exert enormous influence, women have been resisting or sometimes
appropriating the debate to put forward their own agenda. The search for
employment or new life opportunities has driven thousands of women to
migrate, legally or illegally, within Asia as brides, labourers, traders or sex
workers.
In the midst of these transformations, there has been encouraging
evidence of legal changes that recognise the rights of women, exemplified
in the abolition of various patriarchal laws, such as South Korea’s familyhead system, or by the enactment of equal opportunity laws or the lifting
of bans on women in the military. Yet old discriminatory norms and
practices persist and are further complicated by regional political and
economic developments.
This issue of East Asia Forum Quarterly brings together prominent
scholars of gender studies from various countries and disciplines to
explore the diversity and complexity of issues of gender and sexuality in
contemporary Asia. The essays touch on major developments that have
caused shifts in gender relations. They illustrate the tensions between
structural violence against women and women’s own agency in coping
with male-dominant social arrangements.
The main message is that gender politics do not merely reflect societal
shifts. They drive the political, economic and cultural changes that are
transforming the 21st century Asian region.
The Asian Review section looks at the future of Indian federalism and
the question of a new regional order
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East Asia Forum Quarterly
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Open Access via publisher website