Families in Africa: Migrants and the Role of Information Communication Technologies. Edited by Maria C. Marchetti-Mercer, Leslie Swartz and Loretta Baldassar

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Ingrid Palmary
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It helps to understand how, in contexts like South Africa, where Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are less available and data are more expensive than some parts of the world, this might challenge existing knowledge on transnational families. Most notably, the book covers migrant experiences from very different socio-economic circumstances, race and space without flattening out the diversity of experiences—something not common in the existing literature. It also includes significant reflexive writing from the authors’ own migration experiences.</p><p>The book consists of 10 chapters of which six offer empirical insights and four are conceptual in nature. The approach of the empirical chapters is to focus very much on individual narrative and migrant stories. These are valuable in their own right, but they also, in their individual focus, connect to broad themes that can shape future research in the field. This is where the true value of the book lies.</p><p>The first such theme is the significance of geography in an increasingly connected world. As with existing literature, this book shows how ICTs do indeed allow for connection across space that mean family life continues in the online world. For example, Chapter 2 discusses the impact of COVID on the research and how it normalized online family life, which is an important reflexive contribution. And yet, far from rendering geography irrelevant, the chapters also show the ongoing emotional pull that notions of co-present and often nuclear families hold over migrants (see, e.g., Chapter 4). The poignant narratives show what is possible in a world mediated by ICTs but also what is lost. Reading across the chapters, it would appear that what is most lost is intimacy. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This book contributes to a growing literature that seeks to understand the meaning of transnational families in contexts of increasing human mobility. It adds to this literature by focusing on diverse African migration experiences from the perspective of migrants themselves. Capturing the multiple ways that family is made by migrants living in South Africa, it covers the experiences of those who move from rural to urban areas, as well as cross-border migrants from Malawi, Zimbabwe and Kenya. It answers important questions about how people perform family in contexts of extended separation due to migration. It helps to understand how, in contexts like South Africa, where Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are less available and data are more expensive than some parts of the world, this might challenge existing knowledge on transnational families. Most notably, the book covers migrant experiences from very different socio-economic circumstances, race and space without flattening out the diversity of experiences—something not common in the existing literature. It also includes significant reflexive writing from the authors’ own migration experiences.

The book consists of 10 chapters of which six offer empirical insights and four are conceptual in nature. The approach of the empirical chapters is to focus very much on individual narrative and migrant stories. These are valuable in their own right, but they also, in their individual focus, connect to broad themes that can shape future research in the field. This is where the true value of the book lies.

The first such theme is the significance of geography in an increasingly connected world. As with existing literature, this book shows how ICTs do indeed allow for connection across space that mean family life continues in the online world. For example, Chapter 2 discusses the impact of COVID on the research and how it normalized online family life, which is an important reflexive contribution. And yet, far from rendering geography irrelevant, the chapters also show the ongoing emotional pull that notions of co-present and often nuclear families hold over migrants (see, e.g., Chapter 4). The poignant narratives show what is possible in a world mediated by ICTs but also what is lost. Reading across the chapters, it would appear that what is most lost is intimacy. Whilst the practical activities of family life continue, the deeply emotive and intimate nature of family is hard to sustain over distance.

Connected to this, the nature of care and what care means in contexts of geographical distance comes through strongly across the chapters. Whilst ICTs allow for connection, many of them also allow for mediated representations of oneself (particularly on social media) that can reduce the honesty, and thus intimacy, of family connections. When reading Chapter 3, I was struck by how ICTs are not simply something people use to continue their family relationships. Rather, they facilitate the construction of new forms of family and shape the nature of family that is possible and desirable. This raises questions for future research on what might constitute a ‘real’ relationship. Existing research into young people's use of social media clearly shows that they increasingly consider online relationships to be as real as face-to-face ones. And yet, this is clearly not so for all members of a family, and this shapes the nature of what family can be in contexts of migration, who can participate in family life and in what ways.

The book shows clearly how, in spite of shifting conceptualizations of care, the quality of online care is mediated by people's comfort with different technologies and is shaped by age, access to laptops and smart phones and location (such as rural or urban). Many families still prefer a phone call, even if it is expensive (as in Chapter 3). For others, creating intimacy requires a visual image of the other person (Chapter 6). In Chapter 8, we see this line of theory developed the most, and I was left asking whether one needs a body and touch in order to provide care. Thus, together the chapters revisit the important question of how co-presence is constructed in contexts of migration and what forms of family are most likely to feel satisfying to which migrants. In this way, the book considers how emotional connections are shaped by place (brought into focus most clearly in Chapter 9) as well as by the type of migration (refugee migration, economic migration or migration for study to name a few), the nature of the family left behind (older rural family members vs. younger urban ones) and the conditions in the host country. An under-acknowledged factor shaping the nature of family relationships is time and the way that time zones limit people's access to those they love making connections less spontaneous. Through these findings, the book moves between a focus on the day-to-day practicalities of family to the management of significant events such as births, deaths, medical crises and graduations.

This book provides useful similarities and contextual contrasts to the existing research on transnational families. Its focus is very much on the detailed experiences of migrants and presents their experiences in their own voices. It will be useful for scholars and students in many different disciplines although perhaps mostly in migration studies, psychology, sociology and gender studies.

The author declares no conflicts of interest.

非洲家庭:移民和信息通信技术的作用。编辑玛丽亚C.马尔凯蒂-默瑟,莱斯利·斯沃茨和洛雷塔·巴尔达萨
这本书有助于一个不断增长的文学,试图了解跨国家庭的意义在增加人类流动性的背景下。它通过从移民本身的角度关注不同的非洲移民经历,增加了这一文献。它捕捉了生活在南非的移民组成家庭的多种方式,涵盖了从农村到城市地区的移民以及来自马拉维、津巴布韦和肯尼亚的跨境移民的经历。它回答了关于人们如何在移民造成的长期分离的情况下履行家庭责任的重要问题。它有助于理解,在南非这样的情况下,信息通信技术(ict)的可用性较低,数据比世界上某些地区更昂贵,这可能会挑战有关跨国家庭的现有知识。最值得注意的是,这本书涵盖了来自非常不同的社会经济环境、种族和空间的移民经历,而没有使经历的多样性变得平坦——这在现有文献中并不常见。它还包括作者自己的移民经历的重要反思写作。这本书共有10章,其中6章提供实证见解,4章本质上是概念性的。经验性章节的方法是非常关注个人叙述和移民故事。这些研究本身是有价值的,但它们在各自的重点上,也与可以塑造该领域未来研究的广泛主题有关。这就是这本书的真正价值所在。第一个主题是地理在联系日益紧密的世界中的重要性。与现有文献一样,这本书展示了信息通信技术如何确实允许跨空间连接,这意味着家庭生活在网络世界中继续。例如,第2章讨论了COVID对研究的影响,以及它如何使在线家庭生活正常化,这是一个重要的反射性贡献。然而,这些章节不仅没有使地理位置变得无关紧要,而且还展示了共同存在的概念和经常是核心家庭对移民的持续情感吸引力(例如,参见第4章)。这些尖锐的叙述表明,在一个由信息通信技术调解的世界里,什么是可能的,但也失去了什么。通读这些章节,你会发现最失去的似乎是亲密关系。虽然家庭生活的实际活动仍在继续,但家庭的深情和亲密的本质很难跨越距离维持下去。与此相关的是,关怀的本质以及关怀在地理距离背景下的意义贯穿全书的各个章节。虽然信息通信技术允许建立联系,但许多信息通信技术也允许通过中介表达自己(特别是在社交媒体上),这可能会降低家庭关系的诚实度,从而降低亲密度。在阅读第3章时,我对信息通信技术不仅仅是人们用来维持家庭关系的东西感到震惊。相反,它们有助于建立新的家庭形式,并塑造可能和可取的家庭性质。这为未来的研究提出了一个问题,即什么可能构成“真正的”关系。对年轻人使用社交媒体的现有研究清楚地表明,他们越来越认为网络关系和面对面的关系一样真实。然而,显然不是所有家庭成员都是如此,这决定了移民背景下家庭的性质,决定了谁能以何种方式参与家庭生活。这本书清楚地表明,尽管护理的概念发生了变化,但在线护理的质量是如何受到人们对不同技术的适应程度的影响,并受到年龄、笔记本电脑和智能手机的使用情况以及地理位置(如农村或城市)的影响。许多家庭仍然喜欢打电话,即使它很昂贵(如第3章)。对其他人来说,建立亲密关系需要另一个人的视觉形象(第6章)。在第8章,我们看到这条理论线发展得最多,我问一个人是否需要一个身体和触摸来提供照顾。因此,这些章节一起重新审视了在移民背景下如何构建共存的重要问题,以及哪种形式的家庭最有可能对哪些移民感到满意。通过这种方式,本书考虑了情感联系是如何由地点(在第9章中最清楚地关注)、移民类型(难民移民、经济移民或研究移民等)、留守家庭的性质(老年农村家庭成员vs年轻城市家庭成员)和东道国的条件所塑造的。影响家庭关系本质的一个被忽视的因素是时间,时区限制了人们与所爱之人的联系,使联系变得不那么自然。 通过这些发现,这本书从关注家庭的日常实践转向了对重大事件的管理,如出生、死亡、医疗危机和毕业。这本书提供了有用的相似性和背景对比现有的研究跨国家庭。它非常关注移民的详细经历,并以他们自己的声音呈现他们的经历。它将对许多不同学科的学者和学生有用,尽管可能主要是在移民研究、心理学、社会学和性别研究方面。作者声明无利益冲突。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
57
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