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Congolese Social Networks: Living on the Margins in Muizenberg, Cape Town

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Congolese Social Networks: Living on the Margins in Muizenberg, Cape Town

Contributors:

By (Author) Joy Owen

ISBN:

9781498516273

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

16th December 2015

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies, gender groups
Social groups: religious groups and communities
Social and cultural anthropology

Dewey:

304.80968

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

264

Dimensions:

Width 163mm, Height 233mm, Spine 22mm

Weight:

513g

Description

Congolese Social Networks: Living on the Margins in Muizenberg, Cape Town is a closely researched ethnography that focuses predominantly on the lives of three Congolese transmigrants (self-identified as such). This monograph situates them in a cosmopolitan South African space amongst dissimilar South African others, and similar national others. Unlike other contemporary international texts on transnational migrants, this book discusses entre into the immigration country, and the diverse attempts of Congolese men to situate themselves within social networks. In the intellectual move to focus on transnational spaces and transnationality, the reality of migration in a specific socio-political contexta focus on placehas been ignored. Migration on the African continent is more similar to the early migrations of Italian, Polish, and Jewish immigrants to the United States in the initial phases of arrival, adaptation, and reproduction of the national self. While these Congolese transmigrants maintain contact with those back home through various social media applications, their very real survival needs force a day-to-day living that secures survival needs, whilst those of a higher class maintain a focus on lola (paradise)onward migration out of South Africa. An important aspect of securing ones survival needs is the creation of diverse social networks. Through these networks, Congolese transmigrants access information regarding employment, information on appropriate educational opportunities for children, information regarding safe residential areas, and a number of other forms of information that support their existence in an oftentimes alienating South African space.

Reviews

This monograph by Joy Owen is captivating.... Owens work is an innovation in the research on social networks of African immigrants in South Africa. It is particularly exceptional in the case of the Congolese. [Translated from the original French] * Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees *
In Congolese Social Networks Joy Owen takes a path that few anthropologists have dared to follow--the intimacies that define relationships between immigrants--in her case Congolese immigrant men and non-Congolese women in South Africa. In a work that is beautifully written, Owen tactfully describes how transnational migration shapes a matrix of love and loss, fidelity and betrayal, and bonding and alienation--a truly remarkable work of cutting-edge scholarship. -- Paul Stoller, author of Yaya's Story: The Quest for Well Being in the World
This is a study of intra-African migration as a complex and multifaceted phenomenon, with a focus on the thrills and challenges of forging relationships and the pursuit of personal and collective success by migrants from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in South Africa. Owen critically engages the macro and micro conceptual currencies employed by academics to understand and explain various dimensions of human mobility in claiming and negotiating inclusion and belonging. Her recognition of the need for conceptual flexibility and empirical substantiation is commendable, and so is her integration of the personal and biographical -- Francis Nyamnjoh, author of Cest lhomme qui fait lhomme: Cul-de-Sac Ubuntu-ism in Cte dIvoire

Author Bio

Joy Owen is senior lecturer in anthropology at Rhodes University.

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