TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Playing family’
T2 - unruly relationality and transnational motherhood
AU - Dragojlovic, Ana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2016/2/1
Y1 - 2016/2/1
N2 - Scholarly literature on interpersonal relationships between tourist women and local men has been largely discussed under the heteronormative framework of love and sexuality. However, the plenitude of ways in which these intimacies manifest themselves requires that we pay attention to the manifold forms of heterosexual relatedness that these intimacies generate. This article considers how intimate liaisons between Western women and Balinese men that commenced as holiday romances in Bali transform into unruly relationality and transnational motherhood. Focusing the analysis on women's narratives, the article explores how subjects engage in the production of sexual, reproductive, social and economic forms of transnational relatedness wherein the mother and child live permanently in the women's country of citizenship while the Balinese father remains in Bali. Rather than aspiring towards a monogamous relationship and cohabitation as heteronormativity prescribes, the article demonstrates how these non-conventional, transnational families perpetually challenge the nuclear family norm, boundaries of normative motherhood and dichotomies of home versus away.
AB - Scholarly literature on interpersonal relationships between tourist women and local men has been largely discussed under the heteronormative framework of love and sexuality. However, the plenitude of ways in which these intimacies manifest themselves requires that we pay attention to the manifold forms of heterosexual relatedness that these intimacies generate. This article considers how intimate liaisons between Western women and Balinese men that commenced as holiday romances in Bali transform into unruly relationality and transnational motherhood. Focusing the analysis on women's narratives, the article explores how subjects engage in the production of sexual, reproductive, social and economic forms of transnational relatedness wherein the mother and child live permanently in the women's country of citizenship while the Balinese father remains in Bali. Rather than aspiring towards a monogamous relationship and cohabitation as heteronormativity prescribes, the article demonstrates how these non-conventional, transnational families perpetually challenge the nuclear family norm, boundaries of normative motherhood and dichotomies of home versus away.
KW - Bali
KW - changing forms of family
KW - heterosexual relatedness
KW - mobility
KW - transnational motherhood
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84949536812&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/0966369X.2015.1034241
DO - 10.1080/0966369X.2015.1034241
M3 - Article
SN - 0966-369X
VL - 23
SP - 243
EP - 256
JO - Gender, Place, and Culture
JF - Gender, Place, and Culture
IS - 2
ER -