In China in 2018 over 200 million rural migrants worked away from their hometowns, fuelling the country's rapid economic boom. In the 2010s over sixty-one million rural children had at least one parent who had migrated without them, while nearly half had been left behind by both parents. Rachel Murphy draws on her longitudinal fieldwork in two landlocked provinces to explore the experiences of these left-behind children and to examine the impact of this great migration on childhood in China and on family relationships. Using children's voices, Murphy provides a multi-faceted insight into experiences of parental migration, study pressures, poverty, institutional discrimination, patrilineal family culture, and reconfigured gendered and intergenerational relationships.
Based on rich first-hand interviews with left-behind children and their caregivers, as well as migrant parents in the cities
Casts fresh light on changing gender and generational relationships in rural families as China rapidly urbanizes
Provides a multi-faceted insight into children's experiences of parental migration and how their experiences, sentiments and relationships evolve overtime
0 有用 小凿子 2023-08-12 16:08:40 上海
查遗补缺
1 有用 酸芒果蘸老干妈 2021-07-16 03:00:11
虽然观点不算新颖,但是行文、布局以及阐释的方法都值得借鉴。