Book contents
- Relative Distance
- The International African Library
- Relative Distance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Characters
- Introduction
- 1 Securing the Future: Family, Livelihoods, and Mobility
- 2 Aspirations, Obligations, and Imagination in Family Migration
- 3 The Making of ‘Migrants’
- 4 Kinship Dilemmas: Negotiating Relatedness across Space
- 5 Weddings as Transnational Household Rituals: Marriage and Other Intimate Relationships
- 6 Change and Continuity: The Social Reproduction of Families between Kenya and the United Kingdom
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Series page
6 - Change and Continuity: The Social Reproduction of Families between Kenya and the United Kingdom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 June 2023
- Relative Distance
- The International African Library
- Relative Distance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Characters
- Introduction
- 1 Securing the Future: Family, Livelihoods, and Mobility
- 2 Aspirations, Obligations, and Imagination in Family Migration
- 3 The Making of ‘Migrants’
- 4 Kinship Dilemmas: Negotiating Relatedness across Space
- 5 Weddings as Transnational Household Rituals: Marriage and Other Intimate Relationships
- 6 Change and Continuity: The Social Reproduction of Families between Kenya and the United Kingdom
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Series page
Summary
Devoted to issues of change and continuity, Chapter 6 considers the social reproduction of families, particularly the ways in which ‘change’ and ‘continuity’ (understood as tradition) are drawn upon as tropes in moral economies of transnational kinship. In examining each generation of migrants in turn, I suggest that younger migrants assert ‘continuity through change’, a moral claim with important historical resonances, while older women generate ‘change through continuity’ in familial practices. ‘Change’ emerges as a form of social betrayal, complicating ideas of change as understood in narratives of modernity and in Christianity, particularly its presumed desirability. What is at stake in ‘having changed’, an accusation non-migrants level at migrant kin, are existential questions of personhood and belonging, along with potential access to symbolic and material resources.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Relative DistanceKinship, Migration, and Christianity between Kenya and the United Kingdom, pp. 160 - 185Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023