Details
East Asian Mothers in Britain
An Intersectional Exploration of Motherhood and EmploymentPalgrave Macmillan Studies in Family and Intimate Life
96,29 € |
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Verlag: | Palgrave Macmillan |
Format: | |
Veröffentl.: | 12.04.2018 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9783319756356 |
Sprache: | englisch |
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Beschreibungen
<p>How do Chinese, Japanese and Korean mothers in Britain make sense of their motherhood and employment? What are the intersecting factors that shape these women’s identities, experiences and stories? Contributing further to the continuing discourse and development of intersectionality, this book examines East Asian migrant women’s stories of motherhood, employment and gender relations by deploying interlocking categories that go beyond the meta axes of race, gender and class, including factors such as husbands’ ethnicities and the locality of their settlement. Through this, Lim argues for more detailed and context specific analytical categories of intersectionality, enabling a more nuanced understanding of migrant women’s stories and identities.</p> <p><i>East Asian Mothers in Britain</i> will appeal to students and scholars across a range of disciplines and with an interest in identity, gender, ethnicity, class, migration and intersectionality.</p>
<p>1. Introduction.- 2. The question of identity for East Asian migrant women.- 3. Intersectionality and storytelling in the context of East Asian mothers.- 4. Narratives of home-stay mothers: the ideology of intensive motherhood.- 5. Narratives of employed mothers: the Legacy of the Chinese Work Ethic.- 6. Gender relations at home.- 7. Conclusion.</p>
<p>Hyun-Joo Lim is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Bournemouth University, UK.</p>
<p>How do Chinese, Japanese and Korean mothers in Britain make sense of their motherhood and employment? What are the intersecting factors that shape these women’s identities, experiences and stories? Contributing further to the continuing discourse and development of intersectionality, this book examines East Asian migrant women’s stories of motherhood, employment and gender relations by deploying interlocking categories that go beyond the meta axes of race, gender and class, including factors such as husbands’ ethnicities and the locality of their settlement. Through this, Lim argues for more detailed and context specific analytical categories of intersectionality, enabling a more nuanced understanding of migrant women’s stories and identities.</p> <p><i>East Asian Mothers in Britain</i> will appeal to students and scholars across a range of disciplines and with an interest in identity, gender, ethnicity, class, migration and intersectionality.</p>
Examines how the translation of national and/or ethnic cultural heritage has impacted experiences and identity construction Explores how gender relations within families been reformulated in diasporic space Analyses intersecting factors affecting East Asian migrant women’s experiences of motherhood, employment and gender