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1981
Volume 13, Issue 3
  • ISSN: 2046-9861
  • E-ISSN: 2046-987X

Abstract

Chinese ‘big heroine’ dramas have recently emerged as a prominent cultural form that symbolically showcases ideals of women’s empowerment and gender progress. Yet beneath their surface narratives of autonomy and strength lies a persistent tension between symbolic liberation and structural constraint. Drawing on Norman Fairclough’s framework of critical discourse analysis, this article examines how visual symbols, linguistic choices and narrative strategies in major big heroine dramas construct female subjectivity and gender consciousness. While these series appear to challenge traditional gender norms, they remain deeply entangled with entrenched stereotypes and market-driven imperatives. This paradox reveals how empowerment narratives are often appropriated by commercial logics, limiting their potential for cultural transformation. This article argues for deeper narrative reform and more diverse character representation, suggesting ways in which television can not only provide entertainment but also contribute to gender-equitable cultural development.

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2026-02-19
2026-04-18

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