Intimate Mobilities
Title | Intimate Mobilities PDF eBook |
Author | Christian Groes |
Publisher | Berghahn Books |
Total Pages | 248 |
Release | 2018-05-24 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1785338617 |
As globalization and transnational encounters intensify, people’s mobility is increasingly conditioned by intimacy, ranging from love, desire, and sexual liaisons to broader family, kinship, and conjugal matters. This book explores the entanglement of mobility and intimacy in various configurations throughout the world. It argues that rather than being distinct and unrelated phenomena, intimacy-related mobilities constitute variations of cross-border movements shaped by and deeply entwined with issues of gender, kinship, race, and sexuality, as well as local and global powers and border restrictions in a disparate world.
Family and Intimate Mobilities
Title | Family and Intimate Mobilities PDF eBook |
Author | C. Holdsworth |
Publisher | Springer |
Total Pages | 172 |
Release | 2013-02-05 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1137305622 |
This book explores the many varied ways in which family and intimate lives are realized through mobility: from leaving home, courtship, relationship breakdown, moving house, commuting, family holidays through to children's mobilities, documenting how mobility creates, sustains and dissolves family and intimate relations.
Moving Subjects
Title | Moving Subjects PDF eBook |
Author | Tony Ballantyne |
Publisher | University of Illinois Press |
Total Pages | 370 |
Release | 2009 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0252075684 |
Investigating how intimacy is constructed across the restless world of empire
Crossing the Gulf
Title | Crossing the Gulf PDF eBook |
Author | Pardis Mahdavi |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Total Pages | 217 |
Release | 2016-04-27 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0804798842 |
The lines between what constitutes migration and what constitutes human trafficking are messy at best. State policies rarely acknowledge the lived experiences of migrants, and too often the laws and policies meant to protect individuals ultimately increase the challenges faced by migrants and their kin. In some cases, the laws themselves lead to illegality or statelessness, particularly for migrant mothers and their children. Crossing the Gulf tells the stories of the intimate lives of migrants in the Gulf cities of Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait City. Pardis Mahdavi reveals the interconnections between migration and emotion, between family and state policy, and shows how migrants can be both mobilized and immobilized by their family relationships and the bonds of love they share across borders. The result is an absorbing and literally moving ethnography that illuminates the mutually reinforcing and constitutive forces that impact the lives of migrants and their loved ones—and how profoundly migrants are underserved by policies that more often lead to their illegality, statelessness, deportation, detention, and abuse than to their aid.
The Sexual Politics of Border Control
Title | The Sexual Politics of Border Control PDF eBook |
Author | Billy Holzberg |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 202 |
Release | 2022-03-16 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 100054785X |
The Sexual Politics of Border Control conceptualises sexuality as a method of bordering and uncovers how sexuality operates as a key site for the containment, capture and regulation of movement. By bringing together queer scholarship on borders and migration with the rich archive of feminist, Black, Indigenous and critical border perspectives, it highlights how the heteronormativity of the border intersects with the larger dynamics of racial capitalism, imperialism and settler colonialism; reproductive inequalities; and the containment of contagion, disease and virality. Transnational in focus, this book includes contributions from and about different geopolitical contexts including histories of HIV in Turkey; the politics of reproduction in Palestine/Israel; settler colonialism and anti-Blackness in the United States; the sexual geographies of the Balkan and Southern Europe; the intimate politics of marriage migration between Vietnam and Canada; and sex work in Australia, the United States, France and New Zealand. This collection constitutes a key intervention in the study of border and migration that highlights the crucial role that sexual politics play in the reproduction and contestation of national border regimes. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Tangled Mobilities
Title | Tangled Mobilities PDF eBook |
Author | Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot |
Publisher | Berghahn Books |
Total Pages | 278 |
Release | 2022-07-08 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1800735685 |
The emotional, social, and economic challenges faced by migrants and their families are interconnected through complex decisions related to mobility. Tangled Mobilities examines the different crisscrossing and intersecting mobilities in the lives of Asian migrants, their family members across Asia and Europe, and the social spaces connecting these regions. In exploring how the migratory process unfolds in different stages of migrants’ lives, the chapters in this collected volume broaden perspectives on mobility, offering insight into the way places, affects, and personhood are shaped by and connected to it.
Mobile Orientations
Title | Mobile Orientations PDF eBook |
Author | Nicola Mai |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | 244 |
Release | 2018-11-16 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 022658514X |
Despite continued public and legislative concern about sex trafficking across international borders, the actual lives of the individuals involved—and, more importantly, the decisions that led them to sex work—are too often overlooked. With Mobile Orientations, Nicola Mai shows that, far from being victims of a system beyond their control, many contemporary sex workers choose their profession as a means to forge a path toward fulfillment. Using a bold blend of personal narrative and autoethnography, Mai provides intimate portrayals of sex workers from sites including the Balkans, the Maghreb, and West Africa who decided to sell sex as the means to achieve a better life. Mai explores the contrast between how migrants understand themselves and their work and how humanitarian and governmental agencies conceal their stories, often unwittingly, by addressing them all as helpless victims. The culmination of two decades of research, Mobile Orientations sheds new light on the desires and ambitions of migrant sex workers across the world.