Women's Studies International Forum
Volume 50, 2015, Pages 80-88

The embodied crises of neoliberal globalization: The lives and narratives of Filipina migrant domestic workers (Article)

Liu W.*
  • a Critical Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016, United States

Abstract

This paper theorizes the lives and working conditions of Filipina migrant domestic workers in Taiwan. To do so, I focus on the life stories of two migrant women-their struggles with exploitation and care, and their contradictory relationships with home and nation in transnational labor migration. These narratives detail crises of bodily sickness, racialized surveillance, and gendered violence across individual, social, and transnational scales, demonstrating the architecture of neoliberal globalization as a whole. These "embodied crises"-at once personal troubles and structural disasters-show how an overburdened care enforced through the labor of women of color violently affects their very own bodies, with ever-lasting consequences. Thus, using feminist analytic approaches of "critical bifocality" and "countertopography", I argue that these narratives are not individual tragedies, but rather circulate across places, bodies, and time, crafting a structural critique of neoliberal globalization that demands fundamental social transformation. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

womens employment labor migration working conditions immigrant domestic work Taiwan neoliberalism globalization

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928230840&doi=10.1016%2fj.wsif.2015.03.008&partnerID=40&md5=82ee63c4e8dbba51a176d5563dd93f0d

DOI: 10.1016/j.wsif.2015.03.008
ISSN: 02775395
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English