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Soviet signoras : personal and collective transformations in Eastern European migration / Martina Cvajner.

LIBRA JV8138 .C837 2019
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Cvajner, Martina, author.
Series:
Fieldwork encounters and discoveries
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Women immigrants--Italy--Social conditions.
Women immigrants.
Women foreign workers--Italy.
Women foreign workers.
Assimilation (Sociology).
Emigration and immigration.
Social conditions.
Italy--Emigration and immigration.
Italy.
Former Soviet republics--Emigration and immigration.
Former Soviet republics.
Europe, Eastern--Emigration and immigration.
Europe, Eastern.
Assimilation (Sociology)--Italy.
Women immigrants--Social conditions.
Eastern Europe.
Soviet Union--Former Soviet republics.
Physical Description:
x, 265 pages ; 23 cm.
Place of Publication:
Chicago ; London : The University of Chicago Press, 2019.
Summary:
Across the Western world, the air is filled with talk of immigration. The changes brought by immigration have triggered a renewed fervor for isolationism able to shutter political traditions and party systems. So often absent from these conversations on migration are however the actual stories and experiences of the migrants themselves. In fact, migration does not simply transport people. It also changes them deeply. Enter Martina Cvajner's Soviet Signoras, a far-reaching ethnographic study of two decades in the lives of women who migrated to northern Italy from several former Soviet republics. Cvajner details the personal and collective changes brought about by the experience of migration for these women: from the first hours arriving in a new country with no friends, relatives, or existing support networks, to later remaking themselves for their new environment. In response to their traumatic displacement, the women of Soviet Signoras--nearly all of whom found work in their new Western homes as elder care givers--refashioned themselves in highly sexualized, materialistic, and intentionally conspicuous ways. Cvajner's focus on overt sexuality and materialism is far from sensationalist, though. By zeroing in on these elements of personal identity, she reveals previously unexplored sides of the social psychology of migration, coloring our contemporary discussion with complex shades of humanity.
Contents:
A room of one's own: managing spaces, lives, and laws in residential care work
Practicing abundance: immigrant women and the challenge of consumption
Strong mothers, great lovers: sexuality in emigration
Getting serious: courtship, love, and (maybe) marriage in emigration
Proper, respectable places: the arduous construction of community institutions
Conclusion: from the detritus of the Soviet Union into a new social world.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Other Format:
ebook version :
ISBN:
9780226662251
022666225X
9780226662398
022666239X
OCLC:
1089902240

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