- Date
2003
- Auteurs
Catharina Purwani Williams
- Résumé
An examination of the experiences of Indonesian women who migrated from East Nusa Tenggara to engage in domestic work in Hong Kong & other global cities focuses on how they experienced different spaces of transnational movement & how strategies they used to cope with shifting subject positions affected their ability to negotiate their position & achieve their personal goals. Information was obtained from interviews conducted in 1999 & 2000 with 15 women who had returned to East Nusa Tenggara after working as domestics abroad. Their material conditions & experience of spaces are mapped through successive stages of leaving home, traveling, working abroad, & returning home. Attention is given to what motivated them to leave; how they were recruited & obtained familial consent; the "in-transit" period that involved living in dormitories provided by employment agencies; physical & metaphorical transformations needed to meet the expectations of their employers; networks of social relations; & the impact of the sojourning experience on family & community relations after returning home. 6 Figures, 41 References. J. Lindroth
- Journal title
Antropologi Indonesia
- Volume
27
- Numéro
72
- Page numbers
83
- Liens
- Secteurs économiques
Occupations in services - Domestic work et Home child care providers
- Groupes cibles
Chercheurs
- Pertinence géographique
Regional relevance
- Langues
Anglais