4.1 Article

A transnational family story: A narrative inquiry on the emotional and intergenerational notions of 'home'

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EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
卷 48, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.emospa.2023.100967

关键词

Home; Emotional migration; Family; Transnationalism; Insider research

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At the core of migratory experiences lie key questions about one's emotional changing Self, including conflicting identities, feelings of (un)belonging, varying degrees of emotional place (un)attachment, and the fundamental (re)conceptualizations of 'home'. This paper presents personal insights into the intergenerational and emotional dimensions of this topic through an in-depth study on three generations of the author's own family. The findings demonstrate that notions of 'home' as where family is remain predominant, with ties to transnationally dispersed family members rendering 'home' as multiple, and places of familial heritage further remain central in conceptualizations of 'home' through a retainment of cultural practices and values derived from familial homelands. Challenges and emotional uncertainties on the topic are seen to be increasingly prevalent in the youngest generation, and interviewees' post-migration reflections demonstrate that such conceptualizations are intricate, relational, and do not exist in an emotional vacuum.
At the core of migratory experiences lie key questions pertaining to one's emotional changing Self: the complexity of conflicting identities, feelings of (un)belonging, varying degrees of emotional place (un)attachment, and the fundamental (re)conceptualizations of 'home'. Though well-studied from various angles, 'home' as an emotional concept in the context of generational family migration research has many gains yet to be made. Through an in-depth study on three generations of one author's own family, this paper provides personal insight into the intergenerational and emotional dimensions of this topic. Unanimously, the findings demonstrate that notions of 'home' as where family is remain predominant, with ties to transnationally dispersed family members rendering 'home' as multiple. Places of familial heritage further remain central in conceptualizations of 'home' through a retainment of cultural practices and values derived from familial homelands. Despite these cross-generational similarities, challenges and emotional uncertainties on the topic are seen to be increasingly prevalent in the youngest generation. Above all, interviewees' post-migration reflections demonstrate that such conceptualizations are intricate, relational and do not exist in an emotional vacuum.

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