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Women Workers, Migration and Family in Sarawak [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 192 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 520 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Oct-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0700717447
  • ISBN-13: 9780700717446
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 192 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 520 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Oct-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0700717447
  • ISBN-13: 9780700717446
In many parts of South-East Asia, women's lifestyles are going through enormous changes as women move from traditional rural, agricultural lifestyles to modern, urban lifestyles, which often involve migration to cities, taking on paid work, and having a quite different relationship with their families. This book, based on intensive research among the women of the Bidayuh people in Sarawak, all of them first generation migrant wage workers, explores the extent to which women's lifestyles are changing, and the reasons which prompt women to make the changes. How far are such women driven by economic considerations, how far by dissatisfaction with traditional lifestyles, and how far by the appeal of a glamorous urban lifestyle? The author's research includes detailed interviews in the field, and much of this interview material is included in the book, thereby enabling the Bidayuh women to tell their own stories as they grapple with the rapid changes swirling around them.
List of illustrations
viii
List of tables
ix
Preface xi
Introduction
1(10)
Women, wage work and the household
3(4)
Rural-urban migration
7(4)
A methodological discussion
11(15)
An anthropology of women
11(1)
A feminist anthropology
12(3)
Feminist ethnography
15(4)
Positionality and the Politics of representation
19(5)
Conclusion
24(2)
Doing fieldwork at home
26(8)
Research methods
27(3)
Problems and limitations
30(4)
The socio-economic context of change
34(14)
Who are the bidayuh?
34(2)
Rural Bidayuh economy
36(1)
Customary land tenure system
36(2)
State discourse on the shifting cultivation of padi
38(2)
Cash-cropping and the education of children
40(1)
Bidayuh women in rural agrarian society
41(2)
Transformation of village life
43(1)
Rural-urban migration and urbanisation in Sarawak
43(5)
To market, to market: rural-urban migration and becoming modern
48(21)
The desire to be `modern'
49(10)
Economic necessity and migration
59(3)
Decision making about migration: a comparison
62(1)
City or country?
63(2)
Remittances and rural-urban relations
65(2)
Conclusion
67(2)
Overqualified and underpaid: wage work in the personal services sector
69(18)
Some experiences of women in this sector of employment
73(3)
Women's and men's work in the village
76(11)
Sex and salaries: single women migrants in the city
87(11)
Courtship and marriage in the village
90(1)
Bidayuh weddings-then and now
91(1)
Bidayuh households in the village
92(1)
Sexuality and young women migrants
93(1)
Marriage partner selection
94(2)
Rejection of marriage
96(1)
Conclusion
97(1)
Marriage, money and men: working mothers and their households
98(17)
Paid work and life-course squeezes
98(7)
Working wives and their husbands: marriage in the 1990s
105(5)
Autonomy through wage work?
110(3)
Conclusion
113(2)
The hand that rocks the cradle leaves wage work: Bidayuh housewives
115(17)
The Bidayuh housewife: a Western bourgeois family ideal or economic pragramatism?
116(1)
For the sake of the children's education
117(6)
Domestic division of labour
123(4)
Management of household finances
127(4)
Conclusion
131(1)
Holding their own: four women and their stories
132(16)
Making do, stretching limits
134(4)
Submission and resistance
138(3)
Dominated and dominant
141(3)
From abused wife to modern woman
144(3)
Conclusion
147(1)
Conclusion
148(4)
Notes 152(8)
Bibliography 160(13)
Index 173
HEW Cheng Sim teaches in the Faculty of Social Sciences, Universtiy of Malaysia, Sarawak.