This article explores the lived experiences of first-generation Chinese and South Korean mothers living in England. The data are analysed using six intersecting categories: motherhood and gender ideology; educational level; reasons for migration; the length of stay in England; family economic circumstances; and the locality of settlement. The findings suggest that, while there appear to be stark differences in Chinese and South Korean mothers’ understanding of motherhood and employment, their accounts concurrently indicate commonalities in terms of persistent gender inequality at home, founded on patriarchal values. Out of the six interrelated categories, their motherhood and gender ideology obtained in their country of origin seems to have...
Drawing on 68 interviews with South Korean students at elite U.S. colleges, this article examines th...
2011-08-09In this thesis, I try to explore the push and pull factors that contribute to the cross-bo...
This study explores how middle-class migrant East Asian mothers approach their children’s education ...
This article examines the mode of understanding and experiences of family relationships of Chinese m...
Confucianism is said to be the main philosophical backdrop that influences Chinese traditions and no...
This dissertation examines how immigration circuits linking China’s Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefec...
The feminization of care migration in transnational contexts has received a great deal of attention....
The study purposes to depict the transition of women's mothering over the last half century in Kore...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiat...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiate...
This article explores the experiences of ten educated middle-class Singaporean women who act in cont...
The issues of motherhood and mothering remain one of the biggest factors influencing the gendered or...
A large amount of literature has addressed the relationship between women’s employment and fertility...
Mothering is structured by the social and cultural contexts in which it occurs. This study is based...
This thesis examines how individual women's desires and social situations can trigger migration as w...
Drawing on 68 interviews with South Korean students at elite U.S. colleges, this article examines th...
2011-08-09In this thesis, I try to explore the push and pull factors that contribute to the cross-bo...
This study explores how middle-class migrant East Asian mothers approach their children’s education ...
This article examines the mode of understanding and experiences of family relationships of Chinese m...
Confucianism is said to be the main philosophical backdrop that influences Chinese traditions and no...
This dissertation examines how immigration circuits linking China’s Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefec...
The feminization of care migration in transnational contexts has received a great deal of attention....
The study purposes to depict the transition of women's mothering over the last half century in Kore...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiat...
Sociological literature has begun to examine how mothers occupying non-normative positions negotiate...
This article explores the experiences of ten educated middle-class Singaporean women who act in cont...
The issues of motherhood and mothering remain one of the biggest factors influencing the gendered or...
A large amount of literature has addressed the relationship between women’s employment and fertility...
Mothering is structured by the social and cultural contexts in which it occurs. This study is based...
This thesis examines how individual women's desires and social situations can trigger migration as w...
Drawing on 68 interviews with South Korean students at elite U.S. colleges, this article examines th...
2011-08-09In this thesis, I try to explore the push and pull factors that contribute to the cross-bo...
This study explores how middle-class migrant East Asian mothers approach their children’s education ...