Korean Wild Geese Families
Gender, Family, Social, and Legal Dynamics of Middle-Class Asian Transnational Families in North America
Korean Wild Geese Families
Gender, Family, Social, and Legal Dynamics of Middle-Class Asian Transnational Families in North America
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Description
In some cases, family separation is a carefully planned strategy for mobility and opportunity.
Korean Wild Geese Families examines a distinctive form of transnational family life in which Korean mothers and children migrate abroad for education while fathers remain in Korea as primary breadwinners. Tracing these families across the stages of separation, adjustment, and reunification, Se Hwa Lee reveals how this arrangement reshapes gender roles, parenting practices, and family relationships.
Drawing on interviews with mothers in the United States and Canada and fathers in Korea, the book offers a comparative perspective that highlights how immigration policies and legal frameworks shape family experiences differently across North America. The chapters explore key dimensions of this transnational arrangement, including shifts in women's empowerment and access to resources, evolving housework patterns, and transformations in spousal relationships. The book also examines how parenting is renegotiated across distance – through mothers' roles in education and community socialization abroad and fathers' efforts to maintain relationships from afar – before turning to the challenges of reintegration after reunification. Lee sheds light on how factors such as legal status, employment, further education, and engagement with co-ethnic communities influence levels of hardship, belonging, and empowerment among these families.
By demonstrating that transnational family strategies can both challenge and reinforce existing inequalities, this book offers a nuanced understanding of how globalization reshapes intimate life – and why family, gender, and migration must be studied together to fully grasp their impact.
Table of Contents
Chapter One: Women's Empowerment and Three Resources
Chapter Two: Changing Housework Patterns Through Migration
Chapter Three: Transnational Spousal Relationships
Chapter Four: Mothering and Socializing in Korean Immigrant Community
Chapter Five: Transnational Fathering and Father-Child Relationship
Chapter Six: After Family Reunification
Conclusion
References
Index
About the Author
Product details
| Published | 18 May 2021 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 270 |
| ISBN | 9781498583473 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Illustrations | 4 tables; 1 graphs; |
| Dimensions | 227 x 164 mm |
| Series | Korean Communities across the World |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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