This essay examines how women navigate personal and social pressures through artistic practices in contemporary documentary. Drawing on Still Tomorrow (Fan Jian, 2016), Stories We Tell (Sarah Polley, 2012), and my own documentary project about a Chinese law student abroad, it argues that art is not only a medium of expression but also a quiet strategy of survival. Yu Xiuhua writes poetry as resistance to disability and an unhappy marriage; Polley reconstructs her mother’s past through layered memories and staged images; while my protagonist seeks comfort not in speech or creation but in the act of watching theatre. Across these cases, expression and observation both function as ways of reclaiming emotional space, resisting silence, and shaping identity. The essay highlights how art enables women to live, pause, and make sense of themselves in the face of uncertainty.
Yunyi Yang (Mon,) studied this question.