Marriage Without Borders : : Transnational Spouses in Neoliberal Senegal / / Dinah Hannaford.

In popular songs, televised media, news outlets, and online venues, a jabaaru immigré ("a migrant's wife") may be depicted as an opportunistic gold-digger, a forsaken lonely heart, or a naïve dupe. Her migrant husband also faces multiple representations as profligate womanizer, conque...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter EBOOK PACKAGE COMPLETE 2017
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Place / Publishing House:Philadelphia : : University of Pennsylvania Press, , [2017]
©2017
Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Series:Contemporary Ethnography
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Physical Description:1 online resource (180 p.)
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505 0 0 |t Frontmatter --   |t Contents --   |t Preface --   |t Introduction --   |t Chapter 1. Bitim Rëw --   |t Chapter 2. Precarity, Care Work, and Lives Suspended --   |t Chapter 3. Loneliness, Elegance, and Reproductive Labor --   |t Chapter 4. Mobility, Surveillance, and Infidelity --   |t Chapter 5. Sex, Love, and Modern Kinship --   |t Chapter 6. Reunions --   |t Conclusion: The Handmaiden of Neoliberalism --   |t Appendix: Scope and Methods of the Study --   |t Notes --   |t Bibliography --   |t Index --   |t Acknowledgments  
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520 |a In popular songs, televised media, news outlets, and online venues, a jabaaru immigré ("a migrant's wife") may be depicted as an opportunistic gold-digger, a forsaken lonely heart, or a naïve dupe. Her migrant husband also faces multiple representations as profligate womanizer, conquering hero, heartless enslaver, and exploited workhorse. These depictions point to fluctuating understandings of gender, status, and power in Senegalese society and reflect an acute uneasiness within this coastal West African nation that has seen an exodus in the past thirty-five years, as more men and women migrate out of Senegal in hope of a better financial future.Marriage Without Borders is a multi-sited study of Senegalese migration and marriage that showcases contemporary changes in kinship practices across the globe engendered by the neoliberal demand for mobility and flexibility. Based on ten years of ethnographic research in both Europe and Senegal, the book examines a particular social outcome of economic globalization: transnational marriages between Senegalese migrant men living in Europe and women at home in Senegal. These marriages have grown exponentially among the Senegalese, as economic and social possibilities within the country have steadily declined. More and more, building successful social lives within Senegal seems to require reaching outside the country, through either migration or marriage to a migrant. New kinds of affective connection, and disconnection, arise as Senegalese men and women reshape existing conceptions of spousal responsibility, filial duty, Islamic piety, and familial care.Dinah Hannaford connects these Senegalese transnational marriages to the broader pattern of flexible kinship arrangements emerging across the global south, arguing that neoliberal globalization and its imperative for mobility extend deep into the family and the heart and stretch relationships across borders. 
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