TY - BOOK AU - Qiu,Shuang TI - Gender and Family Practices: Living Apart Together Relationships in China T2 - Genders and Sexualities in the Social Sciences, SN - 9783031172502 U1 - 305.3 23 PY - 2022/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Sex KW - Sociology KW - Social groups KW - Ethnology-Asia KW - Culture KW - Feminism KW - Feminist theory KW - Gender Studies KW - Sociology of Family, Youth and Aging KW - Sexuality Studies KW - Asian Culture KW - Feminism and Feminist Theory N1 - 1. Understanding 'Living Apart Together' (LAT) Relationships -- 2. Detraditionalisation and Retraditionalisation of Family Lives: Gender, Marriage and Intimacy -- 3. Reconsidered Agency: Why Do People Live Apart? -- 4. Doing Family at a Distance: How Different Are LAT Relationships to 'Conventional' Partnerships? -- 5. Doing Intimacy While Being Apart: Practices of Mobile Intimacy, Emotion and Filial Piety -- 6. Conclusion N2 - This book examines how gender and heterosexuality structure the lived experiences of people in living apart together (LAT) relationships in contemporary Chinese society. Using in-depth interview data with Chinese LAT people of different ages, the author explores why they live apart; how they construct and make sense of their everyday family lives and negotiate their gender roles; and how they experience intimacy while being physically apart. This text sheds new insights on non-cohabitating intimate partnerships by bringing together themes of gender, family, intimacy, and relationality. Through looking at people's lived experiences in LAT relationships, it argues that practices of family and intimacy are closely implicated with doing gender, and consequently, that gendered family lives and heterosexuality are reconstructed, rather than deconstructed, in order to reclaim conventional forms of family and gender norms in Chinese social, historical and cultural contexts. This book will be of interest to scholars across Gender and Sexuality Studies as well as Family Studies, in addition to scholars of contemporary Chinese culture and society UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17250-2 ER -