BEIJING, July 2 -- Ladies the world round love Sex
and the City - a popular icon of modern single life that is now as recognizable
to audiences in Beijing as in New York City, where the original HBO series was
filmed.
For many young urban Chinese women, the show has
become a familiar guide to the often-fraught relations between the sexes, as
well as a beacon of the latest international fashions.
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Young professional women in China's big
cities, many of whom are fans of Sex and the City, highly prize
independence, gender equality and personal expression. (Photo Source:
China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
As
the movie version of Sex and the City hits the big screen recently, viewers and
critics pause to ponder the meaning of its plotline, and weigh in on its
relevance for women in modern China.
The success of the series on the mainland may mean
that a new generation of women has emerged. Since Western cultural influences
hit cities in China over two decades ago, popular attitudes on many topics have
evolved in pronounced ways.
Many women in big cities like Beijing, Shanghai and
Guangzhou are choosing to lead lifestyles different from those of Chinese women
in the past. These young urbanites say they highly prize independence, gender
equality and personal expression.
Feng Yonghua, 35, a young professional in Beijing,
remembers when her mother advised her to get married at an early age, like her
two older sisters. "If a woman does not get married, let's say before 30, people
thought they were abnormal or even outcast. But now, people think, 'I'm proud of
that! There is no need to worry about being single as long as I am happy with
that.'"
In China, a new generation of young women has
abandoned some aspects of traditional modesty upheld by their mothers and
grandmothers. Although younger women may take numerous paths, their lifestyles
often have one thing in common: freedom and the enjoyment of life.
"In the past, wearing revealing clothes meant that
you are not a good girl," says Feng. "Now, more and more women equate dressing
sexily with being pretty." Feng says she goes to the gym with her friends about
three times a week to keep fit and trim.
The 22-year-old Yang Yang says she closely follows
the fashion tastes of Carrie Bradshaw, the lead character on Sex and the City.
"I always thought that I would never wear floral-patterned skirts," she says. "I
like solids, but now when I'm in a Carrie mood, I'll wear them."
Xu Bingyu, 29, is another devoted fan of the TV
series. She is a senior project manager at a German consulting company based in
Beijing. Like many other young professionals, she enjoys shopping and dining
with friends after work. When she wants to have a quiet night, she sometimes
spends hours curled up on the sofa watching the adventures of Carrie Bradshaw.
Sex and the City gives Xu and her friends an excuse
to chat about sex and their own relationships - topics they are usually too shy
to bring up on their own.
In China, sex used to be a taboo subject, and women
in particular exhibited conservative attitudes.
"If you ask sex-related questions to your parents,
they probably will think you are a bad or strange kid, or, probably they even do
not have enough sex education to explain anyway," says Xu. But now the once
highly provocative idea of one-night stands, a frequent plot twist in the TV
show, is no longer as shocking.
In China's large cities, new nightclubs and bars
cater to singles and serve as popular pick-up spots. Suzie Wong, a bar named
after a famous party girl from 1930s Shanghai, is one such trendy nightspot in
central Beijing. The bar's atmosphere created by dim lights and big Ming Dynasty
beds encourages women's indulgence of wine, music, and pleasure.
In addition, women will often have conversations
comparing their own lives to those of the fictional women from Sex and the City.
"I believe all girls do that, and not just for this series," Xu says. "Most
people are trying to find themselves in someone else, in the movies, in the real
world."
She admits that it isn't only the glamorous aspects
of the TV show that speak to her. "Single, sexy, successful, mid-age ladies
searching for real love, it's not easy, but we keep looking and keep our heads
up. There are sad moments, but we still like to keep our hopes."
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Young women dressing in bikinis dance at
a Beijing night club.(Photo Source: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Newspapers and fashion magazines in China are now
touting the latest fashions from the Sex and the City film. But some wonder: "Is
it a realistic depiction of life in New York?"
"It can be very reflective of Manhattan as it is, but
it really is just a pocket of the city, a specific group of people in a specific
neighborhood. It isn't like this everywhere and for everyone," says Regina
Schrijvers van Zenden, who lived in New York and now splits her time between
Beijing and the United States.
Not everyone, however, see the lives of the Sex and
the City characters as models for their own lives.
"I like the show, but I think it'll be hard for
Chinese people to accept the characters' lifestyles, with so many boyfriends and
one-night stands," says Mercy Sun, a former Beijing magazine editor and now a
public relations agent.
"We have to admit that today's Chinese women are
totally different from the past. They are smart, confident and successful. But
the country's history still has its strong legacy," says Liu Jianhong, a
33-year-old married woman who runs a gallery in Beijing's 798 art district. "For
me, I have my job, but I am also willing to put energy into my family, which is
more important for me."
She enjoys watching the show, but adds, "We, as
Chinese, still have our own values."
(Source: China Daily)