
In Intimacies of Violence, Nadine Shaanta Murshid demonstrates how transnational middle-class Bangladeshi women personally embody structural violence to shed light on the ways in which violence is produced, perpetuated, and resisted. Transnational Bangladeshi women are individuals who occupy space in both the United States and Bangladesh, living bilocating yet bordered lives.Murshid forwards four broad arguments. First, a transnational feminist approach documents the "shock of arrival" to provide an examination of how social locations and associated status impact the intimate economies in which women experience inequities related to love, sex, and desire. Second, drawing on theories from social work, transnational feminism, Bangladesh studies, and migration studies, the book shows how social norms produced at the familial level serve to link the structural and the intimate. Third, the book illustrates how nationalist narratives about Bangladesh's history of wartime rape inform women's construction of violence. Finally, the institutions of home, immigration, and the criminal legal system are implicated as sites of violence for transnational Bangladeshi women.As the first book to examine the private lives of Bangladeshi migrant women, Intimacies of Violence allows academics, policymakers, and practitioners who work with migrant communities and immigration policy to understand the complex ways in which immigrant lives are structured by social systems.
This book investigates how transnational middle-class Bangladeshi women personally embody structural violence to reveal the mechanisms through which such violence is produced, perpetuated, and resisted. Nadine Shaanta Murshid, drawing on her expertise in social work and migration studies, constructs a framework that bridges the gap between macro-level structural inequities and micro-level intimate experiences. By analyzing the lives of women who navigate both the United States and Bangladesh, the author argues that social norms within the family and nationalist historical narratives are critical to understanding the private experiences of migrant women.
What You Will Find
Scholars and practitioners in the field of migration studies recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of transnational identity and structural violence. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which effectively synthesizes complex theories from social work and gender studies to provide a nuanced view of the Bangladeshi migrant experience.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2024-11-11
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197755836
ISBN-13:
9780197755839
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