SOCIAL-PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GENDER POWER IN CONTEMPORARY TAIWANESE CINEMA

Authors

  • Yuting Yang Faculty of Film, Theatre and Animation, Universiti Teknologi MARA, 40450 Shah Alam, Malaysia
  • Ayu Haswida Abu Bakar Faculty of Film, Theatre and Animation, Universiti Teknologi MARA, 40450 Shah Alam, Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37231/apj.2025.8.2.816

Abstract

Abstract: Entering the 2020s, in addition to facing the negative impacts of globalization and neoliberalism, an ongoing problem since the 21st century, we must face the severe test of the COVID-19 pandemic. The film industry has been greatly affected, with slowdowns in film production and postponements of film festivals becoming the norm. However, Taiwanese contemporary cinema has managed to progress steadily and maintain a positive, creative momentum despite the years of the epidemic’s spread. As an important research topic in the field of interdisciplinary studies, gender studies have been inextricably linked to film studies for many years. This paper focuses on the study of gender power in Taiwanese contemporary cinema. Through an extensive literature search, there is a virtual gap in research on gender power in Taiwanese contemporary cinema into the 2020s. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the gender power relations presented in Yen and Ai-Lee, a Taiwanese film focusing on domestic violence released in 2024, through the three aspects of family, workplace, and self-emotional expression portrayed in the film, centred on theories of social psychology, and with due consideration to the social and cultural context of Taiwan. Through qualitative research methods involving case study and textual analysis, film data are collected, collated, and analysed to reveal the recurring and complex portrayals of gender power within cinematic narratives. This endeavour aims to address gaps in Taiwanese contemporary cinema studies concerning gender power dynamics, while offering fresh perspectives and methodologies for interdisciplinary research spanning film studies and social psychology. 

Keywords: Gender Power; Ambivalent Sexism Theory; Taiwanese Contemporary Cinema; Social Psychology; East Asia Film Studies 

 

References

Aspers, P., & Corte, U. (2019). What is Qualitative in Qualitative Research. Qualitative Sociology, 42, 139–160.

Brennen, B.S. (2017). Qualitative Research Methods for Media Studies (2nd ed.) Routledge.

Chao, S. Y. (2020). The Chinese queer diasporic imaginary. In Queer representations in Chinese-language film and the cultural landscape (pp. 39-38). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.

Chiang, M. H. (2022). Nowhere to belong: The father and son relationship and social critique in Tsai Yang- ming’s gangster trilogy. Sun Yat-sen Journal of Humanities, 52, 23–45.

Hancock, D. R., Algozzine, B., & Lim, J. H. (2021). Doing case study research: A practical guide for beginning researchers. Teachers College Press.

Heale, R., & Twycross, A. (2018). What is a case study?. Evidence-Based Nursing, 21(1), 7-8.

Hsieh, H. C. (2024). Women’s bodies and (im-)mobility: Migrant workers’ lust and sex politics in Tea Land and Merah. Sun Yat-sen Journal of Humanities, 56, 55–77.

Jhang, J. (2020). Examining cultural discourses in Taiwanese gender and sexual minority/Tongzhi family-of- origin relationships. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review, 9(1), 146–179.

Pickowicz, P. G., & Zhang, Y. (Eds.). (2020). Locating Taiwan cinema in the twenty-first century. Cambria Press.

Rudman, L. A., & Glick, P. (2021). The social psychology of gender: How power and intimacy shape gender relations. Guilford Press.

Shih, E. (2020). No longer Bond’s girl: Historical displacements of the top female spy in 1960s taiyupian. Journal of Chinese Cinemas, 14(2), 115–126.

Wang, C. C. (2020). Centre stage: Gender representations in Taiwan cinema. In Routledge handbook of East Asian gender studies (1st ed., pp. 301–316). Routledge.

Yau, H. Y. (2023). A Critical Reflection on Chinese Masculinity: Are Chinese Men in Modern Hong Kong and Taiwan the Same?. Translocal Chinese: East Asian Perspectives, 17(1), 32–57.

Yang, Y. (2020). Gender-based research of Sylvia Chang’s film (Master’s thesis, Shanxi Normal University, China). https://kns.cnki.net/KCMS/detail/detail.aspx?dbname=CMFD202102&filename=1021034718.nh

Downloads

Published

2025-10-31 — Updated on 2025-11-01

Versions

How to Cite

SOCIAL-PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GENDER POWER IN CONTEMPORARY TAIWANESE CINEMA. (2025). Asian People Journal (APJ), 8(2), 126-138. https://doi.org/10.37231/apj.2025.8.2.816 (Original work published 2025)