Abstract
Men are seldom a topic of concern in migration research as gendered subjects who experience the implications of social justice, for instance in aspects relating to lives in their families such as fairness of representation, consequences of material redistribution, and management of emotions. Economic migrants in particular, who are seen as matching the role of breadwinners and confirming the status of dominant patriarchal men, are a particularly underrated case. Using the experiences of Wolof men who emigrate from Senegal to become the main providers for their families, this chapter questions this assumption by drawing insights from a theorization on ‘transnational families’, ‘intersectionality’ and ‘masculinity’ as developed within migration and gender studies. The chapter discusses how male gender roles become interlocked with other categories, as asymmetries (be they real or perceived) intervene between the migrant and the stay-behind, and as geographic distance forces them to revisit the propriety of arrangements that enable them to enact their gendered responsibility within families. Caught between pressures deriving from their economic and moral obligations towards family and kin on the one hand, and personal aspirations of fitting the part of successful men on the other, the ethnographic research presented in this chapter shows that migrants engage in an emotional journey that may challenge, rather than confirm, their expectations of ‘hegemonic’ masculinity.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Åkesson, Lisa, 2011: “Remittances and Relationships: Exchange in Cape Verdean Transnational Families”, in: Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology, 76, 3: 326–347.
Al-Ali, Nadje, 2002: “Gender Relations, Transnational Ties and Rituals among Bosnian Refugees”, in: Global Networks, 2, 3: 249–262.
Antoine, Philippe; Sow, Oumar, 2000: “Rapport de Genre et Dynamiques Migratoires”; in: Bozon, Michel; Locoh, Thérèse (Eds.): Rapports de genre et question de population (Paris: Ined): 112–123.
Aranda, Elizabeth M., 2003: “Global Care Work and Gendered Constraints. The Case of Puerto Rican Transmigrants”, in: Gender and Society, 17, 4: 609–626.
Bass, Loretta E.; Sow, Fatou, 2006: “Senegalese Families: The Confluence of Ethnicity, History, and Social Change”, in: Oheneba-Sakyi, Yaw; Takyi, Baffour K. (Eds.): African Families at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century (Westport: Praeger): 83–102.
Broughton, Chad, 2008: “Migration as Engendered Practice. Mexican Men, Masculinity, and Northward Migration”, in: Gender and Society, 22, 5: 568–589.
Bryceson, Deborah Fahy; Vuorela, Ulla (Eds.), 2002: The Transnational Family: New European Frontiers and Global Networks (Oxford: Berg).
Bürkner, Hans Joachim, 2011: “Intersectionality: How Gender Studies Might Inspire the Analysis of Social Inequality among Migrants”, in: Population, Space and Place, 18, 2: 181–195.
Buggenhagen, Beth Anne, 2001: “Prophets and Profits: Gendered and Generational Visions of Wealth and Value in Senegalese Murid Households”, in: Journal of Religion in Africa, 31, 4: 373–401.
Carling, Jørgen, 2008: “The Human Dynamics of Migrant Transnationalism”, in: Ethnic and Racial Studies, 31, 8: 1–26.
Carling, Jørgen; Hernandez Carretero, Maria, 2008: “Kamikaze Migrants? Understanding and Tackling High-Risk Migration from Africa”, paper presented at the conference Narratives of Migration Management and Cooperation with Countries of Origin and Transit, 18–19 September (Brighton: Sussex Centre for Migration Research, University of Sussex).
Chamberlain, Mary; Leydesdorff, Selma, 2004: “Transnational Families: Memories and Narratives”, in: Global Networks, 4, 3: 227–241.
Connell, Raewyn W., 1995: Masculinities (London: Polity Press).
Connell, Raewyn W.; Messerschmidt, James W., 2005: “Hegemonic Masculinity: Rethinking the Concept”, in: Gender and Society, 19, 6: 829–859.
Crenshaw, Kimberlé, 1991: “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color”, in: Stanford Law Review, 43, 6: 1241–1299.
Dannecker, Petra, 2005: “Transnational Migration and the Transformation of Gender Relations: The Case of Bangladeshi Labour Migrants”, in: Current Sociology, 53, 4: 655–674.
Dannecker, Petra, 2009: “Migrant Visions of Development: A Gendered Approach”, in: Population Space and Place, 15, 2: 119–132.
Datta, Kavita; McIlwaine, Cathy; Herbert, Joanna; Evans, Yara; May, Jon; Wills, Jane, 2009: “Men on the Move: Narratives of Migration and Work among Low-Paid Migrant Men in London”, in: Social and Cultural Geography, 10, 8: 853–873.
de Haas, Hein; van Rooij, Aleida, 2010: “Migration as Emancipation? The Impact of Internal and International Migration on the Position of Women Left Behind in Rural Morocco”, in: Oxford Development Studies, 38, 1: 43–62.
Diagne, Alioune; Rakotonarivo, Andonirina, 2010: Les Transferts des Migrants Sénégalais vers la Région de Dakar: Ampleur et Déterminants, MAFE Working paper No. 9 (Paris: Ined).
Diop, Abdoulaye Bara, 1985: La Famille Wolof (Paris: Karthala).
Elmhirst, Rebecca, 2007: “Tigers and Gangsters: Masculinities and Feminised Migration in Indonesia”, in: Population, Space and Place, 13, 3: 225–238.
Fouron, Georges; Glick-Schiller, Nina, 2001: “All in the Family: Gender, Transnational Migration, and the Nation State”, in: Identities, 7, 4: 539–582.
Gardner, Katy; Grillo, Ralph, 2002: “Transnational Households and Ritual: an Overview”, in: Global Networks, 2, 3: 179–190.
Hearn, Jeff, 2009: “Patriarchies, Transpatriarchies and Intersectionalities”, in: Olesky, Elzbieta H. (Ed.): Gender and Intimate Citizenships: Politics, Sexualities and Subjectivity (London: Routledge): 177–192.
Hearn, Jeff, 2011: “Neglected Intersectionalities in Studying Men: Age(ing), Virtuality, Transnationality”, in: Lutz, Helma; Herrera Vivar, Maria Teresa; Supik, Linda, (Eds.): Framing Intersectionality: Debates on a Multifaceted Concept in Gender Studies (London: Ashgate): 89–104.
Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette; Avila, Ernestine, 1997: “‘I’m Here but I'm There?’: The Meanings of Latina Transnational Motherhood”, in: Gender and Society, 11, 5: 548– 571.
Hurtado, Aída; Sinha, Mrinal, 2008: “More than Men: Latino Feminist Masculinities and Intersectionality”, in: Sex Roles, 59, 5–6: 337–349.
Johnson, Phyllis J.; Stoll, Kathrin, 2008: “Remittance Patterns of Southern Sudanese Refugee Men: Enacting the Global Breadwinner Role”, in: Family Relations, 57, 4: 431–443.
König, Reinhilde; de Regt, Marina, 2010: “Family Dynamics in Transnational African Migration to Europe: An Introduction”, in: African and Black Diaspora, 3, 1: 1–13.
Levitt, Peggy; Glick-Schiller, Nina, 2004: “Conceptualizing Simultaneity: A Transnational Social Field Perspective on Society”, in: International Migration Review, 38, 3: 1002–1039.
Lindsay, Lisa A.; Miescher, Spehan F. (Eds.), 2003: Men and Masculinities in Modern Africa (Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann).
Lo, Marième S., 2008: “Beyond Instrumentalism: Interrogating the Micro-dynamic and Gendered and Social Impacts of Remittances in Senegal”, in: Gender Technology and Development, 12, 3: 413–437.
Lukasiewicz, Adam, 2011: “Migration and Gender Identity in the Rural Philippines. Households with Farming Wives and Migrant Husbands”, in: Critical Asian Studies, 43, 4: 577–593.
Mahler, Sarah J.; Pessar, Patricia R., 2001: “Gendered Geographies of Power: Analyzing Gender Across Transnational Spaces”, in: Identities, 7, 4: 441–459.
Mahler, Sarah J.; Pessar, Patricia R., 2003: “Transnational Migration: Bringing Gender In”, in: International Migration Review, 37, 3: 812–846.
Mahler, Sarah J.; Pessar, Patricia R., 2006: “Gender Matters: Ethnographers Bring Gender from the Periphery toward the Core of Migration Studies”, in: International Migration Review, 40, 1: 27–63.
Malkin, Victoria, 2004: “‘We Go to Get Ahead’. Gender and Status in Two Mexican Migrant Communities”, in: Latin American Perspectives, 31, 5: 75–99.
Marques, Margarida; Santos, Rui; Araújo, Fernanda, 2001: “Ariadne’s Thread: Cape Verdean Women in Transnational Webs”, in: Global Networks, 1, 3: 283–306.
Monsutti, Alessandro, 2007: “Migration as a Rite of Passage: Young Afghans Building Masculinity and Adulthood in Iran”, in: Afghan Refugees, 40, 2: 167–185.
Nyamnjoh, Francis B., 2005: “Fishing in Troubled Waters: Disquettes and Thiofs in Dakar”, in: Africa, 75, 3: 295– 324.
Nyberg Sørensen, Ninna, 2005: “Transnational Family Life across the Atlantic: The Experience of Colombian and Dominican Migrants in Europe”, paper presented at the International Conference Migration and Domestic Work in a Global Perspective 26–29 May (Wassenaar, NIAS).
Orellana, Marjorie Faulstich; Thorne, Barrie; Chee, Anna; Lam, Wan Shun Eva, 2001: “Transnational Childhoods: The Participation of Children in Processes of Family Migration”, in: Social Problems, 48, 4: 572–591.
Osella, Filippo; Osella, Caroline, 2000: “Migration, Money and Masculinity in Kerala”, in: Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 6, 1: 117–133.
Parreñas, Rhacel Salazar, 2001: “Mothering from a Distance: Emotions, Gender, and Intergenerational Relations in Filipino Transnational Families”, in: Feminist Studies, 27, 2: 361–390 Parreñas, Rhacel Salazar, 2005: “Long Distance Intimacy: Class, Gender and Intergenerational Relations between Mothers and Children in Filipino Transnational Families”, in: Global Networks, 5, 4: 317–336.
Perry, Donna L., 2005: “Wolof Women, Economic Liberalization, and the Crisis of Masculinity in Rural Senegal”, in: Ethnology, 44, 3: 207–226.
Pribilsky, Jason, 2012: “Consumption Dilemmas: Tracking Masculinity, Money and Transnational Fatherhood Between the Ecuadorian Andes and New York City”, in: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 38, 2: 323–343.
Purwani Williams, Catharina, 2005: “‘Knowing one’s Place’: Gender, Mobility and Shifting Subjectivity in Eastern Indonesia”, in: Global Networks, 5, 4: 401–417.
Riccio, Bruno, 2001: “From ‘Ethnic Group’ to ‘Transnational Community’? Senegalese Migrants’ Ambivalent Experiences and Multiple Trajectories”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 27, 4: 583–599.
Riccio, Bruno, 2008: “West African Transnationalisms Compared: Ghanaians and Senegalese in Italy”, in: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 34, 2: 217–234.
Ryan, Louise; Sales, Rosemary; Tilki, Mary; Siara, Bernadetta, 2009: “Family Strategies and Transnational Migration: Recent Polish Migrants in London”, in: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 35, 1: 61–77.
Sinatti, Giulia, 2008: “Diasporic Cosmopolitanism and Conservative Translocalism: Narratives of Nation among Senegalese Migrants in Italy”, in: Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 6, 3: 30–50.
Sinatti, Giulia, 2009: “Home is Where the Heart Abides. Migration, Return and Housing Investment in Dakar, Senegal”, in: Open House International, 33, 4: 49–56.
Sinatti, Giulia, 2011: “‘Mobile Transmigrants’ or ‘Unsettled Returnees’? Myth of Return and Permanent Resettlement among Senegalese Migrants”, in: Population Space and Place, 17, 2: 153–166.
Svašek, Maruška, 2008: “Who Cares? Families and Feelings in Movement”, in: Journal of Intercultural Studies, 29, 3: 213–230.
Svašek, Maruška; Skrbiš, Zlatko, 2007: “Passions and Powers: Emotions and Globalisation”, in: Identities, 14, 4: 367–383.
Truong, Thanh-Dam; Gasper, Des, 2008: “Trans-local Livelihoods and Connections: Embedding a Gender Perspective into Migration Studies”, in: Gender Technology and Development, 12, 3: 285–302.
Wong, Madeleine, 2006: “The Gendered Politics of Remittances in Ghanaian Transnational Families”, in: Economic Geography, 82, 4: 355–382.
Yeoh, Brenda S. A.; Huang, Shirlena; Lam, Theodora, 2005: “Transnationalizing the ‘Asian’ Family: Imaginaries, Intimacies and Strategic Intents”, in: Global Networks, 5, 4: 307–315.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
This chapter is published under an open access license. Please check the 'Copyright Information' section either on this page or in the PDF for details of this license and what re-use is permitted. If your intended use exceeds what is permitted by the license or if you are unable to locate the licence and re-use information, please contact the Rights and Permissions team.
Copyright information
© 2014 The Author(s)
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Sinatti, G. (2014). 11 Masculinities and Intersectionality in Migration: Transnational Wolof Migrants Negotiating Manhood and Gendered Family Roles. In: Truong, TD., Gasper, D., Handmaker, J., Bergh, S. (eds) Migration, Gender and Social Justice. Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace, vol 9. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-28012-2_11
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-28012-2_11
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-28011-5
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-28012-2
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)