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Women of the Diaspora: Generational Transformations offers fresh insights into the experiences of women who migrated in the aftermath of World War Two.
The contributors examine migration not just as a geographical shift but as a deeply economic, psychological, and intercultural journey-one that profoundly reshaped women's identities and understandings of ethnicity. The volume also explores the lives of the next generation-daughters of diasporic migrants-whose experiences are shaped by a constant negotiation between the cultural traditions of their parents and the values of their new homelands.
Published | 27 Nov 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9798216268383 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
This curated collection offers a timely and critical contribution to feminist approaches to diaspora studies, highlighting the multiple challenges and difficulties that diasporic women face, including racism and oppressive patriarchal norms. Building on extremely rich ethnographic and autoethnographic data, the authors invite us to consider diasporic women's stories in their diversity and complexity, highlighting the importance of intersectional approaches for understanding how and when they can exercise their agency. This collection will be of immense interest to scholars working at the intersection of gender and diaspora studies.
Élise Féron, Tampere University
This book portrays the different ways in which women experience diaspora. The editors include powerful and passionate accounts covering African and Vietnamese migrants, but the core contributions centre on Australian 'proxy brides' brought from southern Europe to marry unseen husbands in Australia. Many struggled with new language acquisition and retained homeland cultures and mother tongues. Without turning them into passive victims, the authors (some themselves descendants of proxy brides) movingly show both how the scars of their original arrival remained and how they could be transcended.
Robin Cohen, professor emeritus, University of Oxford; author of Global Diasporas: An Introduction
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