「中国と東南アジアにおける政治経済的変容と女性の移動」第4回研究会のご案内


台湾の国立交通大学から簡美玲氏を招聘し、京都大学東南アジア地域研究研究所・共同研究会(IPCR)「中国と東南アジアにおける政治経済的変容と女性の移動」の第4回研究会を開催します。
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日時: 2020年1月17日(金)13:30~15:00
会場: 京都大学東南アジア地域研究研究所・稲盛財団記念館201号室(東南亭)
https://kyoto.cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp/

プログラム
13:30-14:30 “Framing Subjectivity, Identities, Mobility & Multiple
Modernities: The Life History Narratives and Migratory Experiences of
the Hmub Women in Southeastern Guizhou” by Prof. Mei-Ling Chien
(National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan)

14:30-15:00 General discussion

Mei-ling Chien is Professor of Cultural Anthropology at National Chiao
Tung University. Her special fields include kinship, gender and the
anthropology of emotions among the Hmub (Miao/Hmong) in Southwest China.
She is the author of the book, Sentiment and Marriage among the Miao
in Eastern Guizhou (Guiyang: Guizhou University Press, 2009) and the
co-editor of the book, the Hakka: Formation and Transformation (Hsinchu:
National Chiao Tung University Press, 2010). She has published a
series of articles related to the above theoretical and areal interests
for more than 15 years. She is now staying at CSEAS of Kyoto University
as a visiting research scholar in August 2019-January 2020.

Abstracts:
Mass migration from rural to urban areas is one of the most visible and
significant aspects of the “rise of China.” Personal experiences both
describe and help us interpret such macro phenomena. This paper is an
ethnography that draws on the author’s ongoing ethnographic fieldwork in
Hmub (Hmong/Miao) villages in the highlands of southeastern Guizhou
since 1997, in particular, field trips in 2011 and 2014. It aims to
explore identity, mobility, marginality, and multiple modernities
through personal histories and narratives that deal with the
cross-regional movement of Hmub-speaking individuals and families, and
the villages and counties they inhabit. Life history narratives not only
help us to reconstruct and interpret the lives of real people through
empirical methodology, but also relate to concepts of performance,
existence and linguistic practice. In particular, this paper focuses on
the life histories of Hmub women and their experiences of rural-urban
migration in southeastern Guizhou (Qiandongnan). Through the study of
these cases, this paper describes and discusses personal experiences and
social transformation from the 1920s to 2010s, showing how Hmub women
migrants frame their own subjectivity, identity, mobility and multiple
modernities through narrating their own life histories. The paper is
based on empirical data gathered through in-depth interviews,
participant observation and historical research.

Keywords: life history, narratives, rural-urban migration, gender,subjectivity, identity, mobility, multiple modernities, Hmub,
Southeastern Guizhou

Contact:
Wakana Sato, Niigata University of International and Information Studies
(wsato[atnuis.ac.jp)