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The rise of all-female spaces in China, between the need for security and sisterhood

The rise of all-female spaces in China, between the need for security and sisterhood

In China, the increase in women's purchasing power is fueling a booming retail sector. Single-sex spaces are among the services that are growing. From restaurants to gyms to cinemas, these places allow customers to regain a sense of security and fully assert their femininity, explains this article published on the Weixin platform.

Du Wen, founder of the bar Her (“she”), in Shanghai, in March 2024. Photo Qilai Shen/The New York Times

[This article can be found in our special issue Women, the fight continues, on sale since May 28 at your newsagent and on our website .]

“What if, on this earth, there were only women left…” “What’s it like to work in an all-female environment?” “Is a world made up of only women completely crazy?” These questions are currently being asked repeatedly on Xiaohongshu, a Chinese platform [often compared to Instagram] where over 70% of members are women. And for good reason: by early 2025, over 4.7 million posts were recorded under the hashtag #QuanNü, a phrase that refers to an “all-female world.” A staggering number of posts are also dedicated to “women-only spaces.”

This is a sign of a new consumer trend in China: unlike traditional social spaces, which are supposed to accommodate the shared expectations of both sexes, more and more places are focusing on interests that are a priori linked to the female sex. This service model responds, more specifically, to the demand of many women to “feel more secure, and [to] be more considered and heard as such.”

How to explain the emergence of

Courrier International

Courrier International

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