Abstract

ABSTRACT Entrepreneurship is often associated with masculinity as well as symbolic and actual male bodies, which creates discursive and material constraints for women entrepreneurs. This study synthesizes an intersectional reinscription analysis and new materialist approaches to agency to explore 34 mainland Chinese women entrepreneurs’ identity construction or boundary-makings in and beyond their work encounters with various actors. Materializing through participants’ narratives are abstract, intangible ‘ideas/ideals’ that become real ‘things’ capable of stirring/halting/altering women’s entrepreneurial activity, including ‘the feminine,’ ‘family harmony,’ ‘stable job,’ and ‘Chinese traditions.’ Already within and as open-ended relations, these nonhuman agents also get reconfigured in encountering women’s entrepreneurial enactments, whereby situated systems of power (apart from gender and occupation) also arise. Practically, this study maps potential sites of intervention in gendered entrepreneurship ecosystems and highlights cultural, work-life, and political insights shown through participants’ boundary-making practices.

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