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MOTHERS (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   159814


Does a stable identity ensure ontological security? talbukin in South Korea / Bregman, Sarah   Journal Article
Bregman, Sarah Journal Article
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2
ID:   101277


Gender of communication: changing expectations of mothers and daughters in urban China / Evans, Harriet   Journal Article
Evans, Harriet Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In the flow of the material, cultural and moral influences shaping contemporary Chinese society, individual desires for emotional communication are reconstituting the meaning of the subject, self and responsibility. This article draws on fieldwork conducted in Beijing between 2000 and 2004 to discuss the gendered dimensions of this process through an analysis of the implications of the "communicative intimacy" sought by mothers and daughters in their mutual relationship. What could be termed a "feminization of intimacy" is the effect of two distinct but linked processes: on the one hand, a market-supported naturalization of women's roles, and on the other, the changing subjective articulation of women's needs, desires and expectations of family and personal relationships. I argue that across these two processes, the celebration of a communicative intimacy does not signify the emergence of more equal family or gender relationships, as recent theories about the individualization and cultural democratization of daily life in Western societies have argued. As families and kin groups, communities and neighbourhoods are physically, spatially and socially broken up, and as gender differences in employment and income increase, media and "expert" encouragement to mothers to become the all-round confidantes, educators and moral guides of their children affirms women's responsibilities in the domestic sphere. Expectations of mother-daughter communication reshape the meaning - and experience - of the individual subject in the changing character of the urban family at the same time as they reinforce ideas about women's gendered attributes and the responsibilities associated with them.
Key Words Communication  China  Women  Gender  Urban China  Mothers 
Daughters 
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3
ID:   155541


Love’s labor’s cost : the family life of migrant domestic workers / Parreñas, Rhacel Salazar   Journal Article
Parreñas, Rhacel Salazar Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In homes across Asia, the Middle East, and the United States, female migrant laborers are doing the difficult work of child and elder care. But these women often leave behind children of their own in countries such as Indonesia and the Philippines. Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, a professor of sociology and gender studies at the University of Southern California, describes how the lack of legal protections for domestic laborers has made it more challenging for women to be present in their children’s lives.
Key Words Immigration  Indonesia  Philippines  Family  Labor Law  Mothers 
Child Care  Elder Care  Domestic Labor 
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4
ID:   155547


Saving families from our fate : a conversation with Saliha Ben Ali / Ali, Saliha Ben   Journal Article
Ali, Saliha Ben Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Journalist Lisa De Bode interviews Saliha Ben Ali, whose son left the family’s home in Belgium four years ago to join a terrorist group in Syria. He was killed a few months later. Since his death, Ben Ali has become an outspoken advocate for parents who fear losing their children to terrorist recruiters.
Key Words Women  Family  Islamic State  Terror  Belgium  Mothers 
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