Friday, February 28th, 2014 Precarious Life at the Margins: Migrant Mothers, Asylum Seekers, and Overstayers

DateTimeLocation
Friday, February 28, 20142:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N, Munk School of Global Affairs
1 Devonshire Place

Series

East Asia Seminar Series

Description

This presentation draws from a chapter of my forthcoming book, Born Out of Place: Migrant Mothers and the Politics of International Labor.
I focus here on a spectrum of migratory situations faced by migrant women workers who become mothers in Hong Kong, paying particular attention to the experiences of those who have become asylum seekers and overstayers. These women are on the least privileged end of the migratory spectrum. Many of them have spent time in prison. Their situations are highly precarious, and their tactics are more desperate and creative than among the privileged migrant wives and workers. Their tactics, in de Certeau’s provocative words, “are procedures that gain validity in relation to the pertinence they lend to time...” (de Certeau 1984: 38). Indeed, “time” is central to mothers’ tactics which serve as interventions that creatively and strategically transform bad situations into more favorable ones, that alter the organization of space, and that fundamentally extend and transform their experiences in Hong Kong.

Nicole Constable is Professor of Anthropology in the Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, and Director of the Asian Studies Center, at the University of Pittsburgh. She is author of several books including: Romance on a Global Stage, Maid to Order in Hong Kong, and Born Out of Place: Migrant Mothers and the Politics of International Labor, soon to be released.


Speakers

Nicole Constable
Professor of Anthropology, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences; Director, Asian Studies Center, University of Pittsburgh


Main Sponsor

Asian Institute

Co-Sponsors

Department of Sociology

Department of Geography & Program in Planning

Women and Gender Studies Institute

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