Migrant mothers' creative challenges to racialized citizenship

Author(s)

    • Erel, Umut
    • Reynolds, Tracey

Bibliographic Information

Migrant mothers' creative challenges to racialized citizenship

edited by Umut Erel and Tracey Reynolds

(Ethnic and racial studies / series editors, Martin Bulmer and John Solomos)

Routledge, 2019

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

How do racialized migrant mothers contest hegemonic racialized formations of citizenship? Bringing together leading scholars from international and multi-disciplinary perspectives, this book shows how migrant mothers realise and problematise their role in bringing up future citizens in modern societies, increasingly characterised by racial, ethnic, religious, cultural and social diversity. The book stimulates critical thinking on how migrant mothers creatively intervene into citizenship by reworking its racialized meanings and creating new, racially plural practices and challenging boundaries. The contributions explore the processes that shape migrant mothers' cultural and caring work in enabling their children to occupy a place as future citizens despite and against their racialized subordination. The book contributes to disciplinary fields of politics, sociology, anthropology, psychoanalysis, participatory arts practice and theory, geography, queer and gender studies, looking at the thematic areas of participatory arts, family forms, social activism, and education in the US, Canada, the UK, France, Portugal. These cross-cultural and disciplinary perspectives contribute to the exciting emergence of a distinctive field of research engaging with pressing intellectual and social issues of how ideas and practices of citizenship develop in the face of increasing spatial mobility and across boundaries of generation and ethnicity, in the process requiring new, creative interventions into how we think about and do citizenship. This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.

Table of Contents

Introduction: migrant mothers challenging racialized citizenship 1. Intimate attachments and migrant deportability: lessons from undocumented mothers seeking benefits for citizen children 2. Caring subjects: migrant women and the third sector in England and Scotland 3. Migrant mothers' creative interventions into racialized citizenship 4. Walking, well-being and community: racialized mothers building cultural citizenship using participatory arts and participatory action research 5. Migrant mothers, home and emotional capital - hidden citizenship practices 6. Cross-border citizenship: mothering beyond the boundaries of consanguinity and nationality 7. Polish migrant mothers accommodating London: practising transcultural citizenship 8. Racialized citizenship, respectability and mothering among Caribbean mothers in Britain

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