Seminar | CCL22230368

Poster of Seminar - The Micro-politics of Recognition and Care: How Adult Children in Urban China Negotiate Relationships with Emigrant Siblings
19 DEC 2022
Speaker(s)
Dr. Ken Chih-Yan SUN
Time
11:00 - 12:30
Venue
Online via Zoom (Internet) and AAB1045
Language
English
Corresponding GA(s)
Learning; Knowledge
Fee
$ 0.00
Organizer
GSIS
Drawing on 65 qualitative interviews, this research develops the concept of “economies of recognition” to analyze the moral frames that siblings caring for left-behind parents in China use to negotiate intimate connections to their emigrant brothers and sisters. We argue that the impact of family dislocation on sibling relations is shaped by family members’ co-constructed relational infrastructure. Our findings identify four types of relational infrastructure—collaboration, intrusion/interference, voluntary takeover, and feeling left behind—that mediate the impact of geographic proximity on parental caregiving. We suggest that the interplay between physical distance and elder care is emotionally experienced, interactionally evaluated, and symbolically understood. Understanding solidarity, conflicts, and ambivalence in the contexts of family crisis requires a close examination of how members of a care network attribute each other’s roles and contributions to power symmetry or asymmetry. This explains why the advice, information, money, people, and emotions that are circulated are thought of as helpful resources in some cases but perceived as constraints in others.
Enquiry
Department of Sociology
34117131
Registration
Registration Through SLES