This women-centred study examines social reconstructions of immigrant mothering among a middle-class minority community of first-generation Coorg women – Kodavathees – in urban Karnataka, Singapore, and Sydney through conceptual lenses of new cosmopolitanisms and new maternalisms.
Cosmopolitan Maternalisms explores how Kodavathee immigrant mothering is practised with a pragmatic awareness of adapting the ways of the ancestors to the promises and pitfalls associated with living in modernity. As a member of this community, which possesses martial and agricultural traditions, and as an immigrant mother herself, Bittiandra Chand Somaiah engages in maternal conversations and in-depth qualitative interviews with forty-three mothers. The book emphasizes the socio-cultural processes associated with cosmopolitanization that accomplish mothering in general and that affect these Kodavathee mothers specifically. Cosmopolitan Maternalisms makes sense of the gendered and globalized convictions, contradictions, and aspirations shared by these mothers who are poised to slowly challenge the heteronormative maternal pedestals and patriarchal structures of middle-class transnational India.
List of Tables and Images
Acknowledgments
Introduction: “Life out of Coorg makes kids cosmopolitan”
1. Kodavathee Immigrant Mothering in Modernity
2. Kuppadis and Baby Showers
3. Pettavva, Pujas, and Cord Burials
4. Cultural Consumption: Risk, Mothering Manuals, and Motherlines
5. Kodava Pedha: “Aspects of our ancestors”
6. Metrolinguistic Care
7. First and Family Foods
8. Transnational Maternal Labours
Conclusion: Cosmopolitan Maternalisms and Modern Coorg Outlooks
Appendices
Glossary
Notes
References
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Bittiandra Chand Somaiah is a lecturer at NUS College and an associate of the migration and mobilities cluster at the Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore.