Women, Immigration and Identities in France 2000
DOI: 10.5040/9781350049062-006
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Cited by 10 publications
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“…Moving from one country to another not only affects expectations of one’s role, but also calls into question one’s ethnic identity. As Freedman and Tarr (2000: 5) assert, ‘within their families, as well as within society as a whole, women of immigrant origin are in a dynamic process, creating new social spaces and negotiating new identities’. Definitions of a person’s ethnicity and his or her sense of belonging are structurally unstable, often incomplete and contingent, owing to the intersections of class, gender, religion or ideological orientations in a particular time and space (Ang, 2003; Fresnoza-Flot and Shinozaki, 2017; Hall, 1997; Massey, 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moving from one country to another not only affects expectations of one’s role, but also calls into question one’s ethnic identity. As Freedman and Tarr (2000: 5) assert, ‘within their families, as well as within society as a whole, women of immigrant origin are in a dynamic process, creating new social spaces and negotiating new identities’. Definitions of a person’s ethnicity and his or her sense of belonging are structurally unstable, often incomplete and contingent, owing to the intersections of class, gender, religion or ideological orientations in a particular time and space (Ang, 2003; Fresnoza-Flot and Shinozaki, 2017; Hall, 1997; Massey, 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%