53
Session
code: 3-6-A104
Title: Gender, national and social class
identities: the case of migrant Spanish women in London.
Contributer/s: Ana Bravo
Abstract
: The paper examines the effects of
international migration on the shaping of national and gender identities of
Spanish women who migrated to the UK between the 1940s and the 1990s from
different socio-economic, educational backgrounds and generations. It explores
the dynamics between the power of social institutions and women's agency in
shaping their identities in two different countries: Spain and the UK. In
looking at individuals' formation of identities, the complexity of the social
sites of different social classes, educational attainments and generations, is
illuminated.
This paper
looks at how gender and nation are appropriated in women's accounts and how
representations of gender and nation relate to other significant social
phenomena. Differences in empirical realities are mirrored in respondents'
accounts. In examining their lives, this paper shows the tension between the
power of institutions, which were created under particular historical, economic
and social conditions, and women's appropriation of institutional discourses in
their identities. This paper argues throughout that while it is important not
to ignore the power of political and economic forces and history as
contributors to women's formation of identities; it is at least as important to
think of identity as an individual appropriation and creation of individual meanings.