Abstract
Valentina Tereshkova's 1963 spaceflight – celebrated as evidence of Soviet gender equality – unfolded within a deeper paradox: the projection of symbolic liberation amidst enduring material oppression. This article reinterprets Tereshkova's mission not as a triumph of emancipation but as a gravitational pivot in the ideological constellation of state feminism. Drawing on archival records, Marxist-feminist theory and Simone de Beauvoir's existential framework, we explore how Tereshkova's ascent became both celestial spectacle and ideological cryonics (the freezing of dissent into state-managed myth) – freezing dissent within myth. Her image, replicated in places from Cuban murals to Algerian tank insignia, served divergent global agendas while obscuring labouring bodies and non-normative identities rendered invisible as ‘dark matter’. Ultimately, Tereshkova's orbit becomes a metaphor for liberation's unfinished trajectory: a brief flare of possibility illuminating planetary systems of constraint. The article advances a novel cosmological framework to theorize how symbolic elevation conceals structural exclusion across historical and contemporary contexts.
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