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Overview

Transnational Aging and Reconfigurations of Kin Work documents the social and material contributions of older persons to their families in settings shaped by migration, their everyday lives in domestic and community spaces, and in the context of intergenerational relationships and diasporas. Much of this work is oriented toward supporting, connecting, and maintaining kin members and kin relationships—the work that enables a family to reproduce and regenerate itself across generations and across the globe.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813588094
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Publication date: 03/10/2017
Series: Global Perspectives on Aging
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 242
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

PARIN DOSSA is a professor of anthropology at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. She is the author of Afghanistan Remembers: Gendered Narrations of Violence and Culinary Practices.
 
CATI COE is a professor of anthropology at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey. She is the author of The Scattered Family: Parenting, African Migrants, and Global Inequality.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Transnational Aging and Reconfigurations of Kin Work

Parin Dossa and Cati Coe
 

Part One: The Kin-scription of Older People into Care

1.      Flexible Kin Work, Flexible Migration: Aging Migrants Caught between Productive and Reproductive Labor in the European Union

Neda Deneva

2.      The New Aging Trajectories of Chinese Grandparents in Canada

Yanqiu Rachel Zhou

3.      Sacrifice or Abandonment? Nicaraguan Grandmothers’ Narratives of Migration as Kin Work

Kristin Elizabeth Yarris
 

Part Two: Reconfigurations of Kinship and Care in Migration Contexts

4.      Fostering Change: Elderly Foster Mothers’ Intergenerational Influence in Contemporary China

Erin L. Raffety

5.      Negotiating Sacred Values: Dharma, Karma, and Migrant Hindu Women

Mushira Mohsin Khan and Karen Kobayashi

6.      Transformations in Transnational Aging: A Century of Caring among Italians in Australia

Loretta Baldassar
 

Part Three: Aging, Kin Work, and Migrant Trajectories

7.      Returning Home: The Retirement Strategies of Aging Ghanaian Care Workers

Cati Coe

8.      Balancing the Weight of Nations and Families Transnationally: The Case of Older Caribbean Canadian Women

Delores V. Mullings

9.      The Recognition and Denial of Kin Work in Palliative Care: Epitomizing Narratives of Canadian Ismaili Muslims

Parin Dossa
 

References

About the Contributors

Index

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