Sri Lankan Men Working as Cleaners and Carers: Negotiating Masculinity in Naples
- 23 September 2010
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Men and Masculinities
- Vol. 13 (1) , 65-86
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184x10382881
Abstract
Drawing on an intersectional approach, the article examines how Sri Lankan domestic workers’ masculinities are constructed and negotiated in conjunction with race and ethnicity by Neapolitan employers and the male domestic workers themselves. The article discusses how Neapolitan employers construct Sri Lankan masculinity as effeminate, asexual, and unthreatening and how these Sri Lankan men themselves strategically exploit these stereotypes in gaining access to jobs that are socially constructed as women’s work. However, in relation to their own community and families, and quite contrary to the Neapolitan employers’ stereotypes, Sri Lankan men negotiate rather hegemonic and traditional notions of masculinity. The article draws on ethnographic research conducted in Naples including participant observation within the Sri Lankan community and in-depth interviews with Sri Lankan male and female domestic workers, as well as with Neapolitan employers of Sri Lankan male domestic workers. By looking at the experiences of these migrant men, the article contributes to the understanding of how intersectional categories work in different and often contractory ways in the everyday negotiations of subjectivities. The article draws our attention to how racial and ethnic differences can be strategically deployed by the members of a specific group. It also concludes that there is no fixed notion of Sri Lankan masculinity. Rather, it is contextualized and constructed quite differently by Neapolitan employers and Sri Lankan men themselves.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intersectionality as buzzwordFeminist Theory, 2008
- A Job with No BoundariesEuropean Journal of Women's Studies, 2007
- A Very Private BusinessEuropean Journal of Women's Studies, 2007
- Militarizing Sri Lanka: Popular Culture, Memory and Narrative in the Armed ConflictPublished by SAGE Publications ,2007
- Italy is not a good place for men: narratives of places, marriage and masculinity among Malayali migrantsGlobal Networks, 2006
- Undoing GenderPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2004
- Veiled Meanings: Young British Muslim women and the negotiation of differences [1]Gender, Place & Culture, 1999
- Sri Lanka's Structural Adjustment Program and Its Impact on Indo-Lanka RelationsAsian Survey, 1998
- The Distinguishing Features of Domestic Service in ItalyJournal of Family History, 1990
- Servants: The Obsolescence of an Occupational RoleSocial Forces, 1973