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Itaru Nagasaka Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences Université d’Hiroshima (Japon)

Midi du Normes , morales et mod è les familiaux et sexuels 22 mai 2014 12h45 – 14h LECL 93. Itaru Nagasaka Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences Université d’Hiroshima (Japon) Growing up in a transnational social field

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Itaru Nagasaka Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences Université d’Hiroshima (Japon)

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  1. Midi du Normes, morales et modèlesfamiliaux et sexuels22 mai201412h45 – 14hLECL93 ItaruNagasaka Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences Université d’Hiroshima (Japon) Growing up in a transnational social field Experiences of family separation and reunification of the Filipino 1.5 generation in Italy A growing body of literature on transnational parenthood has highlighted the emotional hardships faced by migrant mothers and by their children left behind. These studies have emphasized the significance of the emotional qualities of kinship relations, and offered important insights into the effects of the normative discourse on parent-child relationships in the course of transnational migration. However, some recent studies have expressed concern with the decontextualized tendency of this approach, and have called for more nuanced analysis to capture the complexity, diversity, and ambivalence of the dynamics of transnational families. Drawing on ethnographic research on the Filipino 1.5 generation, who were left behind in a rural area of the Philippines by their migrant parents, and who subsequently immigrated to Italy at a school-going age, this presentation aims to contribute to this endeavor. By interpreting the narratives of Filipino migrants’ children in terms of normative discourses on parent-child and family relationships, and the processual, flexible, and ambiguous aspects of kinship prevalent in the rural Philippines, it argues that the children’s experiences of separation from and reunification with parents are related to the contradictory nature of their family and kinship ideologies as well as their distinctive class and social experiences.

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