Who is the “New Second Generation”? Children of Cross-border Marriages in Taiwan

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Monday, October 17th, 2022

DateTimeLocation
Monday, October 17, 20224:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in room 208N, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto.
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Series

Global Taiwan Lecture Series

Description

Abstract:

 

Cross-border marriages have grown across East Asia in the last few decades. Children from these transnational unions are reaching adulthood, but their identity formation is yet subject to academic scrutiny. Drawing on in-depth interviews with 50 young adult children of cross-border marriages in Taiwan, this talk examines how differences in ethnic backgrounds (Mainland Chinese or Southeast Asian immigrant mothers) shape their identity management strategies. I emphasize that the macro context of geopolitics enables and constrains their identity negotiation at the micro level. Taiwan’s New Southbound Policy, implemented in 2016, reframed the ethnic difference of Southeast Asian immigrants as a multicultural asset instead of a social liability, allowing “the new second generation” (a new official label) to enjoy some institutional opportunities and ethnic dividends. By contrast, as political confrontation has intensified across Taiwan’s Strait, Chinese spouses are easily suspected of lacking political loyalty; their language and cultural intimacy also make it difficult to claim a multicultural niche. Their children have developed different strategies, including replacement, rescaling, and differentiation, to manage the conflicting and ambiguous identities.  

 

Speaker Bio:  

 

Pei-Chia Lan is Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Director of Global Asia Research Center at National Taiwan University. She was a Yenching-Radcliffe fellow at Harvard University, a Fulbright scholar at New York University, a visiting professor at the Waseda Institute for Advanced Study, Kyoto University, and Tubingen University, and a postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley. Her major publications include Global Cinderellas: Migrant Domestics and Newly Rich Employers in Taiwan (Duke 2006, winner of Distinguished Book Award from the Sex and Gender Section of the American Sociological Association and ICAS Book Prize: Best Study in Social Science from the International Convention of Asian Scholars) and Raising Global Families: Parenting, Immigration, and Class in Taiwan and the US (Stanford 2018).


Speakers

Pei-Chia Lan
Speaker
Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Director of Global Asia Research Center, National Taiwan University

Tong Lam
Chair
Associate Professor of History and Director of the Global Taiwan Studies Initiative at the Asian Institute, Munk School, University of Toronto


Main Sponsor

Asian Institute

Sponsors

Global Taiwan Studies Initiative


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