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The enactment of agency in international academic mobility: a case of Chinese female PhD students in Australia

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Abstract

Despite widespread discourse subordinating the female PhD as a third gender in the Chinese media, little is known about how this cohort conceptualises themselves, especially in an international context. Based on a qualitative investigation into 10 Chinese female doctoral students in Australia, this study examines their enactment of agency in international academic mobility. Drawing on the notions of “agency in mobility” and in-betweenness, this article shows that Chinese female PhD students demonstrate three forms of agency. Their agency influences how they judge, utilise, produce and imagine relations, symbols and activities in the in-between space, which in turn gives shape to their enactment of agency. This study challenges the validity of the idea that the Chinese female PhD is a sexless third gender and illuminates the dynamic reciprocity between agency and the in-betweenness in shaping their transformative doctoral student identity.

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Xu, X. The enactment of agency in international academic mobility: a case of Chinese female PhD students in Australia. Aust. Educ. Res. 48, 757–770 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13384-020-00411-x

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