This article examines a subgenre of time-travel romance, one predominantly authored by women intended for female audience. It subverts dominant cultural discourses by re-centering female experience within historical and imaginative contexts. As a form of non-mimetic fiction aligned with the fantastic, it challenges the realist aesthetic, which continues to define Chinese literary production as a politically normative ideology. This study engages multiple intertextual and historical layers, including classical Chinese fiction, early twentieth-century modern romance, revolutionary romantic literature, popular romance conventions, and the formal logic of the fantastic. Anchored in the fantastic, it constructs dual or multiple-world structures—a heterotopian chronotope shaped by postmodern linguistic hybridity, and by the interplay of fragmented temporalities and spatialities. This investigation further considers how elements drawn from China’s imperial past, fused with modern consciousness and spatial imaginaries, generate a dialogic narrative space in which female protagonists pursue not only their romantic fulfillment but also their historical aspirations. Ultimately, the most compelling ideological impulse driving this subgenre is not merely the realization of romantic ideals but the reclamation of women’s agency within a historical framework.
Jie Lu (Mon,) studied this question.