CHING WU LAKE LUI2023-11-302023-11-302018-04-010192513Xhttps://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/637451China’s household registration system (hukou) that assigns citizens into “rural” or “urban” status is a stratifying tool that shapes people’s social rights based on parents’ place of origin. This ethnographic research on inter-hukou couples suggests that the interlinked institutions of state and patriarchy construct differentiated and uneven marital power dynamics whereby inequalities are reproduced and/or transformed through everyday interactions. Rural wives of urban men are socially stigmatized and are treated by their husbands’ families as “unpaid reproductive workers,” depriving them of full membership in the urban family and the urban society. To resist overlapping oppression, rural women mask themselves as appropriate wives and filial daughters-in-law, achieving “urbanness” at the frontstage. At the same time, they secretly make gender alliances in both virtual and real spaces and lobby for their urban husbands’ support at the backstage, slowly eroding the dual structure of gender and hukou through family dynamics.China | gender | hukou | intermarriage | intersectionality | marital power | migration | patriarchyMarital Power in Inter-Hukou Families in China: An Intersectionality Approach<sup>1</sup>journal article10.1177/0192513X176923782-s2.0-85041564846https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85041564846