All in the Family: Gender, Transnational Migration, and the Nation‐State
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Identities
- Vol. 7 (4) , 539-582
- https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2001.9962678
Abstract
Over the years, feminist scholarship has illuminated the ways in which genders are differentiated and gender hierarchies are constituted as part of the way women and men learn to identify with a nation‐state. Much less has been said about the social reproduction of gender in transnational spaces. These spaces are created as people emigrate, settle far from their homelands, and yet develop networks of connection that maintain familial, economic, religious, and political ties to those homelands. The task of this paper is to begin to explore the ways in which gender and nation are mutually constituted within the transnational social fields that link homeland and new land. This paper is exploratory, using a case study of Haitian transnational connections as a catalyst for future investigation.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- From Hermano Lejano to Hermano Mayor: the dialectics of Salvadoran transnationalismEthnic and Racial Studies, 1999
- The Emergence of a Transnational Social Formation and The Mirage of Return Migration Among Dominican TransmigrantsIdentities, 1997
- On Global and Local Agents and the Social Making of Transnational Identities and Related Agendas in “Latin” AmericaIdentities, 1997
- The Public/Private – The Imagined Boundary in the Imagined Nation/State/Community: The Lebanese caseFeminist Review, 1997
- ExodusCritical Inquiry, 1994
- Gender and nationEthnic and Racial Studies, 1993
- Borders and Boundaries of State and Self at the End of EmpireJournal of Historical Sociology, 1991
- Labor Migrations of Poles in the Atlantic World Economy, 1880–1914Comparative Studies in Society and History, 1989
- Sociological ambivalence: The case of East European peasant-immigrant workers in America, 1880s?1930sQualitative Sociology, 1987
- Class and Committees in a Norwegian Island ParishHuman Relations, 1954