AREA Ruhr Book Talk Series
In socialist China, the state forestry and timber sectors employed men as official state workers, while women participated as family dependents and collective laborers. Starting in the 1950s, these groups transformed rural landscapes into urban-industrial zones. This makes forestry an exceptional case for examining how government policies shaped and reinforced interconnected dualisms—such as those between humans and nature, urban and rural areas, production and reproduction, and male and female labor. Drawing on oral histories from Fujian, this publication places personal stories of work and resistance in forestry and wood processing within the broader framework of postrevolutionary socialist reforms and China’s rapid economic growth after the 1990s. By exploring how sawmill and forest farm workers adapted state projects and contested authority, this book fosters dialogue across gender studies, labor studies, and environmental studies. Dr. Shuxuan Zhou is a policy analyst in the Seattle Office of Labor Standards and an affiliated faculty member with the University of Washington Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. She is also a nonfiction writer, aiming to bridge the Chinese- and English-speaking worlds. In this episode, she discusses her 2024 publication with AREA Ruhr host Dr. Nicolas Schillinger (University of Duisburg-Essen, Institute of East Asian Studies). This talk was recorded on 6 May 2025.
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