
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
Downwardly Global: Women, Work, and Citizenship in the Pakistani Diaspora
Lalaie Ameeriar
€ 41.47
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Downwardly Global: Women, Work, and Citizenship in the Pakistani Diaspora
Paperback. Lalaie Ameeriar follows the experiences of immigrant Pakistani women in Toronto who-despite being skilled, white-collar workers-suffer high levels of unemployment and poverty and who are advised by government-sanctioned worker programs to conform to an embodied form of multiculturalism that privileges whiteness and erases difference. Num Pages: 224 pages. BIC Classification: JFFN; JFSJ1; JHMC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 5817 x 3887. Weight in Grams: 318.
In Downwardly Global Lalaie Ameeriar examines the transnational labor migration of Pakistani women to Toronto. Despite being trained professionals in fields including engineering, law, medicine, and education, they experience high levels of unemployment and poverty. Rather than addressing this downward mobility as the result of bureaucratic failures, in practice their unemployment is treated as a problem of culture and racialized bodily difference. In Toronto, a city that prides itself on multicultural inclusion, women are subjected to two distinct cultural contexts revealing that integration in Canada represents not the erasure of all differences, but the celebration of some differences and the eradication of others. Downwardly Global juxtaposes the experiences of these women in state-funded unemployment workshops, where they are instructed not to smell like Indian food or wear ethnic clothing, with their experiences at cultural festivals in which they are encouraged to promote these same differences. This form of multiculturalism, Ameeriar reveals, privileges whiteness while using race, gender, and cultural difference as a scapegoat for the failures of Canadian neoliberal policies.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Duke University Press United States
Number of pages
224
Condition
New
Number of Pages
277
Place of Publication
North Carolina, United States
ISBN
9780822363163
SKU
V9780822363163
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-50
About Lalaie Ameeriar
Lalaie Ameeriar is Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Reviews for Downwardly Global: Women, Work, and Citizenship in the Pakistani Diaspora
“Ameeriar’s book echoes an important refrain from diasporic feminist scholars, insisting that despite the various scales at which disenfranchisement and violence function, migrant women resourcefully find ways to persist.” - Kareem Khubchandani (Journal of Asian American Studies) “Radically subversive, superbly written.” - Pnina Werbner (Pacific Affairs) "Of interest to scholars of citizenship and governance, globalization and neoliberalism, gender and embodiment, multiculturalism and race, this book is a rich read for its deployment of analytical concepts and the creation of two new ones: pedagogies of affect and sanitized sensorium." - Alison Shaw (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute)