âThis book draws the reader into the fleeting moment, and the lifetime, that is childhood through richly describing what children see, hear, perhaps even feel as they move between places: what they leave behind, what they bring with them and how they piece together connections and separations between places as they simultaneously work out their own place in the world. The book will appeal to anyone curious about the process of growing up in a transnational reality.â (Sarah Green, University of Helsinki, Finland)âThis timely collection is a valuable resource for anyone interested in children and transnational migration. It contributes detailed knowledge of how children respond to the challenges of mobility and how they create and perceive links to particular localities and the people inhabiting them. Evocative accounts are provided, based on long-term ethnographic research involving diverse sets of participants and allowing comparisons across state borders, ethnic origins and dimensions of social and economic privilege. A particular contribution to studies of transnational families lies in a well-grounded shift of attention from discourses of longing and belonging, to embodiment, infrastructures and child agency. I find the focus on the significance of the body, senses and material practices particularly compelling.â (Maja PovrzanoviÄ Frykman, MalmĂś University, Sweden)
âGrounded in long-term fieldwork, this book offers rare insights into how family is done from the point of view of children who move between multiple geographic, social and cultural contexts. In addition to presenting an illuminating account of corporeal, material and symbolic aspects of translocal existence, authors provide methodological inspiration for ways in which to give children an ethnographic voice. This is a must for anybody interested in the translocal approach, childhood studies, or the lived intertwining of east and north Europe.â (Elo-Hanna Seljamaa, University of Tartu, Estonia)
âThis engaging collection based on multi-sited and follow-up longitudinal ethnography is remarkable evidence of the increasing interest in childrenâs agency in family migration. Rich and sensitive child-centred mobility stories show a panorama of children maturing during transmigration from the cradle through baby naming, flying to the new country, purchasing sweets never seen before, looking after younger siblings, making new friends and spending summer back home with grandma. A must read for everybody who does not assess migration as a solely adult experience.â (Olga Tkach, Centre for Independent Social Research (CISR), Russia)
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