International Migration Review
Volume 52, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 780-808
Intimate Counter‐Spaces of Migrant Domestic Workers in Lebanon 1 (Review)
Pande A.*
-
a
University of Cape Town, South Africa
Abstract
This article examines new nodes of migrants' desire to disrupt the heteronormative focus on married mothers in the literature on migration and gender and the reification of normative notions of both gender and sexuality. It demonstrates that in the presence of intense raced and gendered surveillance of both private and public spaces in Lebanon, migrant domestic workers (MDWs) use public “counter‐spaces” to forge intimate and sexual ties. It offers the frame of intimate counter‐spaces to understand the wider politics of resistance mobilized by MDWs in their everyday lives. Intimate counter‐spaces complicate debates around public/private, sacred/sexual, and confront state restrictions on migrant workers' sexuality. Despite their subversive power, such spaces can also reinforce the hypersexualization of the female migrant and highlight the paradoxical effects of everyday subversive practices used by migrant workers, not just in Middle East and Asia, but also across the world. © 2017 by the Center for Migration Studies of New York.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85060078597&doi=10.1177%2f0197918318781838&partnerID=40&md5=a45b275258791de88f82ddb3c843177a
DOI: 10.1177/0197918318781838
ISSN: 01979183
Original Language: English