Portuguese Women in Toronto: Gender, Immigration, and Nationalism

Capa
University of Toronto Press, 01/01/2002 - 161 páginas

Wenona Giles takes a new look at migration in this innovative study of Portuguese women by examining the gender, class, and race relations of the immigrant Portuguese population from the micro level of personal experience to the macro level of the long-lasting societal repercussions of immigrant status and welfare on their children. Comparing across two generations of Portuguese Canadian women, the book delves into issues such as cultural heterogeneity among Portuguese immigrants, the ambiguity of work and gender politics, the concept of 'home' versus nationalism, and raises concerns about the ways in which global political and economic inequities have affected Portuguese women's citizenship.

Drawing on over sixty interviews with Portuguese immigrants and community workers in Toronto, Giles weaves theoretical perspectives around direct quotes to provide a complete picture of the Portuguese immigrant experience. Her case study of Portuguese women sheds new light not only on Portuguese immigrants to Canada, but also on Canadian nationalism, immigration, and multicultural policies, and their connection with national and global economic situations, that affect all immigrants to Canada.

 

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Página 119 - Diaspora space is the point at which boundaries of inclusion and exclusion, of belonging and otherness, of 'us' and 'them', are contested. My argument is that diaspora space as a conceptual category is 'inhabited', not only by those who have migrated and their descendants, but equally by those who are constructed and represented as indigenous.
Página 18 - The point of new historical investigation is to disrupt the notion of fixity, to discover the nature of the debate or repression that leads to the appearance of timeless permanence in binary gender representation.
Página 13 - ... foreseeable future. II. GLOBAL INEQUALITY AND MIGRATION PRESSURES The most basic determinant of contemporary trends in international migration is the dramatic inequality of socioeconomic and political conditions in a world that is more integrated than ever before into a single field of social interaction. No corner of the globe is now left that has not been restructured by market forces, uprooting the last remnants of subsistence economies and propelling ever-growing numbers to move about in...
Página 119 - Diaspora space is the intersectionality of diaspora, border, and dis/location as a point of confluence of economic, political, cultural, and psychic processes.
Página 119 - Rather, the concept of diaspora concerns the historically variable forms of relationality within and between diasporic formations. It is about relations of power that similarise and differentiate between and across changing diasporic constellations. In other words, the concept of diaspora centres on the configurations of power which differentiate diasporas internally as well as situate them in relation to one another.
Página 120 - The state's management of these 'moral aliens', who are to be found in the marginal matrix of citizenship, is exercised in social, political and economic arenas. This is the twilight zone between the liberal and republican constructions of citizenship, where religious, ethnic and sexual minorities are located outside the national 'moral community

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Acerca do autor (2002)

WENONA GILES is Associate Professor in the School of Social Sciences, Atkinson Faculty at York University.

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