Affiliation:
1. Portland State University
Abstract
Physical and symbolic aspects of bodies limit the migration trajectories
of female domestic workers from a Buddhist community in coastal Sri
Lanka. Government regulations and family decisions regarding women’s
overseas labour draw upon and in turn influence discourses about gender,
sexuality, age, health, and class. This ethnographic analysis illustrates that
local norms task women with nurturing the brains of babies, preserving
the chastity of teenage daughters, caring for frail elders, and preventing
their working-class husbands from overindulging in liquor or having sex
with other women. Successful social reproduction depends on the proper
conjunctions of bodies in the extended family. Corporeal and symbolic
dangers imagined to arise from women’s absence fuel a national-level
moral panic about female migration.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press
Cited by
2 articles.
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