Abstract
Chinese migrants have been emigrating to the Netherlands since 1911. Particularly after World War Two, female migrants outnumbered male migrants, yet their daily-life practices and transnational motherhood experiences have remained largely unknown. For this reason, my study pays attention to first-generation Chinese migrant women’s narratives on their experiences of post-migration life in the Netherlands, and especially to their real-life motherhood practices. Based on the narratives of 38 Chinese migrant women from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and China and because of their individual differences, I could analyse their subject narratives with a gendered and intersectional lens. In this light, I found that intersectional differences shape migrant women’s post-migration lives, which indicates the significance of contemporary meanings of Chinese transnational motherhood practices.
Original language | English |
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Award date | 10 Jul 2015 |
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Publication status | Published - 10 Jun 2015 |
Keywords
- gender
- women
- Chinese
- migration
- motherhood
- intersectionality
- education
- class
- the Netherlands