Distributed for Campus Verlag
Conceptualising "Home"
The Question of Belonging among Turkish Families in Germany
245 pages, 5-1/2 x 8-3/8
Paper $49.00
ISBN: 9783593387918
Published May 2009
Introduction The scope of the study The question of ‘home’ in the context of the study Research approach The organization of dissertation PART 1: HOME, HEIMAT, ‘VATAN’ AND BELONGING 1. Conceptualising home 1.1. Introduction 1.2. Defining home across three socio-linguistic contexts 1.3. Conceptualising home 1.4. Re-conceptualising home/s after migration PART 2: TURKISH MIGRATION TO GERMANY: GENDER AND GENERATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN BELONGING 2. Turkish immigrants in Germany: Generations, experiences, belongings 2.1. Introduction 2.2. The First Generation 2.3. The second generation 2.4. The third generation 3. Gender in the experience of migration and home-making 3.1. Introduction 3.2. Gender and migration research 3.3. Gendered aspects of Turkish migration to Germany and the post-migration employment of Turkish women 3.4. Women and home/s: Travelling men and home-making women 3.5. Conclusions and outlook PART 3: EMPIRICAL RESEARCH4. Empirical Research 4.1. Recapitulation of research objectives 4.2. Research Questions 4.3. Research Methods 4.3.1. Qualitative Research: Problem-Centred Interviews 4.3.2. Breaking into the field: ‘Heard about the one from Turkey?’ 4.3.3. Data Analysis PART 4: RESULTS: HOMES ACROSS GENERATIONS AND GENDER 5. Homes across three generations 5.1. Introduction 5.2. From guests to commuters: The first generation 5.3. Claiming home: The second generation 5.4. Fighting for belonging: The third generation 6. Gender differences in the experience of migration and conceptualisation of home among Turkish immigrants 6.1. The profile of male and female participants 6.2. Gender in the process of migration 6.3. Gendered ‘home/s’ 6.4. Return orientations 6.5. Conclusions 7. Home/s at the crossroads of gender and generations in and across families 7.1. Introduction 7.2. Common themes and shared patterns of communication across families and generations ng=EN-GB style="mso-ansi-language: EN-GB"7.3. Differences across families: Changing emphases on culture, nation and religion 7.4. Gendered communication of belonging across generations 7.4.1. Women and communication 7.4.2. Men and communication 7.5. Conclusions 8. Conclusions 8.1. Recollecting fragments, reconsidering belongings The first generation: From breezy homes to heavy lives The second generation: Leaving and arriving. A matter of breathing The third generation: Incomplete lives, substitute homes Generational differences in and across familial contexts 8.2. Implications of the study References Appendix 1 Appendix 2 Appendix 3
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