RAS History & PhilologyEthno review

  • ISSN (Print) 0869-5415
  • ISSN (Online)3034-6274

MIGRATION, MASCULINITY, AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIAL SPACE IN THE SOKH VALLEY, UZBEKISTAN

PII
S0869-54150000402-5-1
DOI
10.31857/S50000402-5-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Volume/ Edition
Volume / Issue 4
Pages
32-50
Abstract
This article explores the relationship between gendered migration and transformations in social space in the Sokh valley of Uzbekistan, from where many men leave to work seasonally in Russia. The article argues that migration and masculinity are co-constitutive, in ways that reveal much about the complexities of gender and generational dynamics in contemporary Sokh. A period of work in Russia has the potential to confi rm a young mans status and identity as a man, but it is also fraught with existential and emotional risks. Meanwhile, the fact of widespread male absence is raising the stakes of staying behind for those men who are unable, or unwilling to leave to work in town in ways that are likely to be important for future migration dynamics. The article cautions against assumptions that gendered migration is producing a wide-scale breakdown in marriage in rural Uzbekistan. To understand why, it argues, we need an explanation that moves beyond patriarchy or the inherent conservatism of rural society to explore both the inter-play of gender and generational hierarchies, and the role of community and family membership in articulating ideals of Sokh manhood today.
Keywords
migration, masculinity, Uzbekistan, gender, domestic space
Date of publication
01.07.2012
Number of purchasers
1
Views
596

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At the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation

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