2016
DOI: 10.1177/1354067x15606979
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Culture, ambivalence, and schismogenesis: Mothering double binds and gendered identities within Cape Verdean and Indian migrant families (Portugal)

Abstract: This article offers a comparative analysis of two ethnographic case studies on double bind interactions within the mother-child relationship. In-depth interviews with, as well as participant observation among Cape Verdean and Indo-Mozambican migrant families settled in Portugal provide insight into the way in which mothering double bind interactions influence the dynamics of change and resistance involved in the gendered identities of their adult sons and daughters. In the analysis, we draw upon Bateson's dyna… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Yet it is distinct in that it offers means for understanding the psychological consequences of paradoxical communicative practices in which individual actors are embedded, particularly through the notion of the double bind. Although the relevance of a pragmatic‐communicative approach to political science has been noted from the outset (Bateson, ), and the double‐bind concept has found its way into other fields (O'Neill & O'Reilly, ; Sools, Engen, & van Baerveldt, ; Trovão, ), the concept has not been used in political science yet.…”
Section: The Greek Referendum As Paradoxical Communicative Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet it is distinct in that it offers means for understanding the psychological consequences of paradoxical communicative practices in which individual actors are embedded, particularly through the notion of the double bind. Although the relevance of a pragmatic‐communicative approach to political science has been noted from the outset (Bateson, ), and the double‐bind concept has found its way into other fields (O'Neill & O'Reilly, ; Sools, Engen, & van Baerveldt, ; Trovão, ), the concept has not been used in political science yet.…”
Section: The Greek Referendum As Paradoxical Communicative Practicementioning
confidence: 99%