Fr. 69.00

Family, Story, and Identity - Migrant Women Living with Ambivalence

English · Hardback

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Description

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How do second-generation migrant women connect with their cultural heritage when ethnic ties have been weak or absent for most of their lives? Family, Story and Identity presents the life stories of twenty women of various ethnicities, analysis of published autobiographies, as well as autoethnographic accounts of the author's experiences, to show how stories connect adult children of immigrants with their cultural heritage. The collecting of stories comes in various forms and can include brief visits to ancestral homelands, documenting family histories and genealogies, and gathering stories, folktales, and recipes. Senem Mallman found that, as adults, many children of immigrants actively seek out family histories and stories in order to connect with their cultural heritage and with their parents, and to pass this knowledge on to their own children. She argues that seeking out stories enables the second-generation to find a place within their family narrative. This pursuit of stories leads them toward developing new perspectives about their culture, family and life in Australia, and new ways of living with their cultural ambivalence.

List of contents

Chapter 1 Introduction.- Chapter 2 Being on the Outside.- Chapter 3 Stories.- Chapter 4 The Prince.- Chapter 5 Changing Perspectives.- Chapter 6 The Newlyweds.- Chapter 7 People and Place.- Chapter 8 The Angel.- Chapter 9 Conclusion.- Appendix: Biography of Participants.

About the author

Senem Mallman is a social science researcher in Melbourne, Australia. She has a PhD in anthropology from La Trobe University.

Summary

How do second-generation migrant women connect with their cultural heritage when ethnic ties have been weak or absent for most of their lives? Family, Story and Identity presents the life stories of twenty women of various ethnicities, analysis of published autobiographies, as well as autoethnographic accounts of the author’s experiences, to show how stories connect adult children of immigrants with their cultural heritage. The collecting of stories comes in various forms and can include brief visits to ancestral homelands, documenting family histories and genealogies, and gathering stories, folktales, and recipes. Senem Mallman found that, as adults, many children of immigrants actively seek out family histories and stories in order to connect with their cultural heritage and with their parents, and to pass this knowledge on to their own children. She argues that seeking out stories enables the second-generation to find a place within their family narrative. This pursuit of stories leads them toward developing new perspectives about their culture, family and life in Australia, and new ways of living with their cultural ambivalence.

Product details

Authors Senem Mallman
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9789811319143
ISBN 978-981-1319-14-3
No. of pages 198
Dimensions 154 mm x 233 mm x 17 mm
Weight 400 g
Illustrations X, 198 p. 1 illus.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Geosciences > Geography

Migration, B, Gender, Culture, Sociology, Cultural Studies, Ethnology, biotechnology, Social Sciences, Social & cultural anthropology, Migration, immigration & emigration, Sociology, general, Social Anthropology, Emigration and immigration, Human Geography, Sociocultural Anthropology, Gender and Culture, Culture and Gender

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