Architectural metaphors: construction of feminism vis‑à‑vis Confucian culture in women’s magazines in China
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Springer Nature Limited
Abstract
Feminism is frequently depicted through the metaphors of struggle and warfare in English-language magazines, underscoring an oppositional stance
towards patriarchal structures. Yet, the discursive construction of feminism in Chinese women’s magazines, unaddressed by Chen (2023), remains underexplored.
This study investigates the use of architectural metaphors in representing feminism within the context of Confucian cultural values, analyzing two magazines, Women
of China and Marriage and Family. A corpus of 4,182 articles (3,631,345 words) was analyzed. Lexical realizations like “construction” and “support” were identified
using the AntConc 4.2.4. Architectural metaphors are prioritized for their systemic structural mapping and Confucian cultural embeddedness. In Women of China,
women are framed as primary builders of national projects, while in Marriage and Family, they are portrayed as individuals developing within family life. Under a
Confucian lens, these metaphors depict feminist progress as a form of “social renovation” grounded in harmony. To explore intersectional tensions, the metaphors
integrate rural–urban and caregiver-professional identities as complementary “structural components”, reflecting the Confucian ideal of “harmony in diversity”. This
study reveals how women’s dual roles in family and society are framed as natural extensions of the social structure, offering concrete strategies to promote gender
equality while accommodating cultural traditions.
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Chen, SF., Ting, SH. Architectural metaphors: construction of feminism vis-à-vis Confucian culture in women’s magazines in China. Int. Commun. Chin. Cult (2026). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40636-026-00371-4
