Disenchanted With the Immigrant Dream: The Sociological Formation of Ex-Immigrant Subjectivity

Jacob Richard Thomas
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Abstract

Although many return migrants had planned to go back to their country of origin, other return migrants who had originally planned to pursue the immigrant dream––the idea that one can have a better life by migrating—eventually change their mind and return to their society of origin. Just as the identity of individuals must adjust to the loss of a relationship, job, or membership of a group, many formerly aspiring immigrants give up on immigrating. I analyze data from oral history interviews and social media narratives of 121 Chinese ex-immigrants from 16 different countries. I show how disappointments, the language barrier, cultural alienation, racial-ethnic discrimination, intersectional-gender issues, barriers to upward socioeconomic mobility, and/or restrictive immigration policies interact with each other to constitute ex-immigrant subjectivity. This article highlights why immigration is a far less certain process than many perceive it to be, contributing to the broader sociological literature on how in different and similar ways processes of abandoning important social endeavors, like a romantic partnership, political party, or religious faith, transform subjectivities and social identities in other domains of social life.
对移民梦的失望:前移民主体性的社会学形成
尽管许多回国移民原本计划返回原籍国,但也有一些回国移民原本计划追求移民梦--即认为通过移民可以过上更好的生活--但他们最终改变了主意,返回了原籍社会。正如个人身份必须适应失去关系、工作或群体成员身份一样,许多曾经有抱负的移民也放弃了移民。我分析了来自 16 个不同国家的 121 名中国前移民的口述历史访谈和社交媒体叙事数据。我展示了失望、语言障碍、文化疏离、种族民族歧视、性别交叉问题、社会经济向上流动的障碍和/或限制性移民政策如何相互作用,构成了前移民的主体性。这篇文章强调了为什么移民的过程远没有许多人认为的那么确定,为更广泛的社会学文献做出了贡献,这些文献探讨了放弃重要的社会努力(如浪漫的伴侣关系、政党或宗教信仰)的过程是如何以不同和类似的方式改变社会生活其他领域的主体性和社会身份的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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