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ID164300
Title ProperCrafting social change
Other Title Information former global factory workers negotiating new identities in Sri Lanka’s villages
LanguageENG
AuthorHewamanne, Sandya
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article explores how former factory workers negotiate new identities in villages, as new brides, mothers and daughters-in-law, after 5–6 years of employment in an urban Free Trade Zone. I argue that their performances of self-discipline and disavowal of transgressive knowledges allow them to make use of the limited social, economic and political spaces available while gradually reshaping local understandings about the good daughter-in-law. Former workers’ strategic deployment of social conformity represents the foundation on which their entry into village social, economic, political spaces is based on. Although individual social conformity would conventionally be identified as everyday politics, I argue that former workers’ performance of self-discipline and social conformity is strategic and leads to changes in gender norms and village social hierarchies and thus represents a form of politics that is in between everyday and transformative politics – politics that creates conditions of possibility for social transformations.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 26, No.2; April 2019: p.165-183
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2019-04 26, 2
Key WordsSocial Change ;  Sri Lanka ;  Gender Norms ;  Global Factory Workers ;  Performing Conformity ;  Transformative Politics