Intersectionality, class and migration : narratives of Iranian women migrants in the U.K. /: narratives of Iranian women migrants in the U.K. (2017)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Intersectionality, class and migration : narratives of Iranian women migrants in the U.K. /: narratives of Iranian women migrants in the U.K. (2017)
- Main Title:
- Intersectionality, class and migration : narratives of Iranian women migrants in the U.K.
- Further Information:
- Note: Mastoureh Faith.
- Authors:
- Fathi, Mastoureh
- Contents:
- Series Introduction—Nira Yuval-Davis 1. Class, intersectionality and Iranian diaspora 1.1 Iranian women's employment and class 1.2 Iranian migrants and social class 1.3 Making sense of class in migration: co-constructing narratives 1.4 Iranian parties, concerts and doctors' hubs 1.5 Religion, an absent theme in class stories 1.6 Outline of the book 2. Intersectionality and Translocational Class 2.1 Classic literature of class and the question of intersectionality 2.1.1Marxism and class 2.1.2 Status and class 2.1.3 The cultural turn to class 2.2 Intersectionality and the treatment of class 2.2.1 Situated intersectionality 2.2.2 Power relations and intersectionality 2.2.3 Privileged position and intersectionality 2.3 Identity and translocational positionality 2.3.1 Translocational class 2.4 Conclusion 3. Classed and Gendered Growing up 3.1 Educational surveillance 3.1.1 Creating ambition: Passing on class to the girls 3.1.2 Mothers and class surveillance 3.1.3 Lack of choice or destined pathways? 3.1.4 Governing the ambition 3.2 Normalisation of the pathways 3.2.1 Lack of ambition as deviant 3.2.2 Not discussing class to construct classed identity 3.2.3 Embarrassment and normalisation 3.2.4 Westernisation as a 'normal' pathway 3.3 The making of a moral self 3.3.1 Respect 3.4 Conclusion 4. Classed Place-making 4.1 Diasporic spaces 4.2 Countries 4.3 Schools 4.4 Neighbourhoods 4.5 Spatial class: a conclusion 5. Classed Performing 5.1 Class-coded acts 5.1.1 Class and performance:Series Introduction—Nira Yuval-Davis 1. Class, intersectionality and Iranian diaspora 1.1 Iranian women's employment and class 1.2 Iranian migrants and social class 1.3 Making sense of class in migration: co-constructing narratives 1.4 Iranian parties, concerts and doctors' hubs 1.5 Religion, an absent theme in class stories 1.6 Outline of the book 2. Intersectionality and Translocational Class 2.1 Classic literature of class and the question of intersectionality 2.1.1Marxism and class 2.1.2 Status and class 2.1.3 The cultural turn to class 2.2 Intersectionality and the treatment of class 2.2.1 Situated intersectionality 2.2.2 Power relations and intersectionality 2.2.3 Privileged position and intersectionality 2.3 Identity and translocational positionality 2.3.1 Translocational class 2.4 Conclusion 3. Classed and Gendered Growing up 3.1 Educational surveillance 3.1.1 Creating ambition: Passing on class to the girls 3.1.2 Mothers and class surveillance 3.1.3 Lack of choice or destined pathways? 3.1.4 Governing the ambition 3.2 Normalisation of the pathways 3.2.1 Lack of ambition as deviant 3.2.2 Not discussing class to construct classed identity 3.2.3 Embarrassment and normalisation 3.2.4 Westernisation as a 'normal' pathway 3.3 The making of a moral self 3.3.1 Respect 3.4 Conclusion 4. Classed Place-making 4.1 Diasporic spaces 4.2 Countries 4.3 Schools 4.4 Neighbourhoods 4.5 Spatial class: a conclusion 5. Classed Performing 5.1 Class-coded acts 5.1.1 Class and performance: a delicate relationship 5.1.2 Performing class-coded acts <5.2 Feminine doctors: femininity and educational capital 5.2.1 'Owning' the doctor's role: being authentic 5.2.2 Classed performance and morality< 5.3 Compulsory Class 5.3.1 Imagined images, real differences 5.4 Translocational class performances: a conclusion 6. Classed Racialisation 6.1 Being racialised 6.2 Racialising others 6.3 Racialisation in class construction 6.4 Conclusion 7. Classed Belonging 7.1 Foreignness, power and class 7.1.1 Is there a glass ceiling in British society? 7.1.2 'I make here my soil. I make here my country' 7.2 'Others' and the hierarchies of belonging 7.2.1 'Deserving' to belong 7.3 Conclusion 8. Understanding Class Intersectionally: A Way Forward 8.1 Situated understanding of class <8.2 Intersectionality and class 8.3 Social locations, relations and localities 8.4 Complexity of social class . … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- Basingstoke, Hampshire : Palgrave Macmillan
- Publication Date:
- 2017
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 305.89155041
Iranians -- Great Britain
Social integration -- Great Britain
Middle class -- Iran
Middle class -- Great Britain
Women professional employees -- Great Britain - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781137525307
- Related ISBNs:
- 9781137525291
- Notes:
- Note: Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.
- Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.354073
- Ingest File:
- 01_312.xml