Othering mechanisms and multiple positionings: Children of Thai-Belgian couples as viewed in Thailand and Belgium

A. Fresnoza‐Flot
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Studies on the so-called “second generation” mainly focus on individuals whose parents are both migrants. This overlooks the situation of the children of “mixed” couples, in which one parent is a migrant and the other a citizen of the country in which they live. These mixed-parentage young people mostly inhabit cross-border social spaces that connect their parents’ respective countries of origin. Given this situation, how are these young people viewed in the countries in which they are enmeshed? How do they position themselves in relation to the viewpoints and stereotypes about them in these social spaces that traverse the borders of nation-states? To answer these questions, the present study examines the case of children of Thai-Belgian couples, who are called luk-kreung (half-child) in Thailand and metis in Belgium. Analysis of the empirical data gathered using qualitative methods shows that the study informants had access to citizenship in both of their parents’ countries of origin. Nonetheless, they remained widely subjected to othering due to their phenotypic characteristics, which are perceived as “different” from those of the majority population. This othering prompted them to adopt multiple positioning strategies: invisibilising their ethnic roots, accepting and highlighting their supposed “Otherness”, and acquiring Thai nationality (for those who did not yet have it).
其他机制和多重定位:泰国和比利时夫妇的子女
对所谓“第二代”的研究主要集中在父母都是移民的个人身上。这忽略了“混合”夫妇子女的情况,在这种情况下,父母一方是移民,另一方是他们居住国家的公民。这些父母混杂的年轻人大多居住在连接父母各自原籍国的跨境社交空间。在这种情况下,这些年轻人在他们所处的国家是如何看待的?在这些跨越民族国家边界的社会空间中,他们如何将自己与关于他们的观点和刻板印象联系起来?为了回答这些问题,本研究调查了泰国-比利时夫妇的孩子,他们在泰国被称为luk kreung(同父异母),在比利时被称为metis。对使用定性方法收集的实证数据的分析表明,研究举报人在其父母的原籍国都有获得公民身份的机会。尽管如此,由于它们的表型特征,它们仍然广泛地受到其他物种的影响,这些表型特征被认为与大多数种群的表型特征“不同”。这种另类促使他们采取多种定位策略:隐藏自己的种族根源,接受并强调自己所谓的“另类”,以及获得泰国国籍(对于那些还没有泰国国籍的人)。
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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