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Cross–Border Marriages – Gender and Mobility in Transnational Asia

Autor Nicole Constable
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 sep 2004
Illuminating how international marriages are negotiated, arranged, and experienced, Cross-Border Marriages is the first book to chart marital migrations involving women and men of diverse national, ethnic, and class backgrounds. The migrations studied here cross geographical borders of provinces, rural-urban borders within nation-states, and international boundaries, including those of China, Japan, South Korea, India, Vietnam, the Philippines, the United States, and Canada. Looking at assumptions about the connection between international marriages and poverty, opportunism, and women's mobility, the book draws attention to ideas about global patterns of inequality that are thought to pressure poor women to emigrate to richer countries, while simultaneously suggesting the limitations of such views.

Breaking from studies that regard the international bride as a victim of circumstance and the mechanisms of international marriage as traffic in commodified women, these essays challenge any simple idea of global hypergamy and present a nuanced understanding where a variety of factors, not the least of which is desire, come into play. Indeed, most contemporary marriage-scapes involve women who relocate in order to marry; rarely is it the men. But Nicole Constable and the volume contributors demonstrate that, contrary to popular belief, these brides are not necessarily poor, nor do they categorically marry men who are above them on the socioeconomic ladder.

Although often women may appear to be moving "up" from a less developed country to a more developed one, they do not necessarily move higher on the chain of economic resources. Complicating these and other assumptions about international marriages, the essays in this volume draw from interviews and rich ethnographic materials to examine women's and men's agency, their motivations for marriage, and the importance of familial pressures and obligations, cultural imaginings, fantasies, and desires, in addition to personal and economic factors.

Border-crossing marriages are significant for what they reveal about the intersection of local and global processes in the everyday lives of women and men whose marital opportunities variably yield both rich possibilities and bitter disappointments.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780812218916
ISBN-10: 0812218914
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 153 x 228 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MT – University of Pennsylvania Press
Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Nicole Constable, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Pittsburgh, is the author of Romance on a Global Stage: Pen Pals, Virtual Ethnography and "Mail Order" Brides, among other works.

Cuprins

1. Introduction: Cross-Border Marriages, Gendered Mobility, and Global Hypergamy
—Nicole Constable
2. Cross-Border Hypergamy? Marriage Exchanges in a Transnational Hakka Community
—Ellen Oxfeld
3. Cautionary Tales: Marriage Strategies, State Discourse, and Women's Agency in a Naxi Village of Southwestern China
—Emily Chao
4. Marrying out of Place: Hmong/Miao Women Across and Beyond China
—Louisa Schein
5. Marrying Up and Marrying Down: The Paradoxes of Marital Mobility for Chosnjok Brides in South Korea
—Caren Freeman
6. A Failed Attempt at Transnational Marriage: Maternal Citizenship in a Globalizing South Korea
—Nancy Abelmann and Hyunhee Kim
7. Tripartite Desires: Filipina-Japanese Marriages and Fantasies of Transnational Traversal
—Nobue Suzuki
8. Clashing Dreams in the Vietnamese Diaspora: Highly Educated Overseas Brides and Low-Wage U.S. Husbands
—Hung Cam Thai
9. A Tale of Two Marriages: International Matchmaking and Gendered Mobility
—Nicole Constable


Descriere

Explores the patterns of marriages of Asian women, including the legendary "mail-order bride."