Skip navigation

DSpace

機構典藏 DSpace 系統致力於保存各式數位資料(如:文字、圖片、PDF)並使其易於取用。

點此認識 DSpace
DSpace logo
English
中文
  • 瀏覽論文
    • 校院系所
    • 出版年
    • 作者
    • 標題
    • 關鍵字
    • 指導教授
  • 搜尋 TDR
  • 授權 Q&A
    • 我的頁面
    • 接受 E-mail 通知
    • 編輯個人資料
  1. NTU Theses and Dissertations Repository
  2. 文學院
  3. 人類學系
請用此 Handle URI 來引用此文件: http://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/60667
完整後設資料紀錄
DC 欄位值語言
dc.contributor.advisor司黛蕊(TERI Silvio)
dc.contributor.authorLUKUSA MUFULA Stanislasen
dc.contributor.author羅達義zh_TW
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-16T10:25:21Z-
dc.date.available2013-08-20
dc.date.copyright2013-08-20
dc.date.issued2013
dc.date.submitted2013-08-15
dc.identifier.citationReferences
Adams, R. (1966). ‘Power and Power Domains’, America Latina 9:3-5,
8-11.
Adrian B, (2004) Framing the Bride: Globalizing Beauty and Romance
In Taiwan’s Bridal Industry.
Appadurai, A. (1996). Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of
Globalization.
Bertoncello, Brigitte and Sylvie B. (2007). “The emergence of new
African ‘trading posts’ in Hong Kong and Guangzhou,” China Perspectives, No.1, pp 94 –105.
Blood, R., and Wolfe, D. (1960). Husbands and wives: The dynamics of
married living. New York: Free Press.
Breger, R. (1998). Love and the state: Women, mixed marriages and the
law in Germany. In R. Breger & R. Hill (Eds.), Cross-cultural marriage: Identity and choice (pp. 129-152). New York: Oxford International Publishers Ltd.
Bodomo A.B. (2007). “An emerging African-Chinese community in
Hong Kong: the case of Tsim Sha Tsui's Chungking Mansions,” in Kwesi Kwaa Prah (ed), Afro-Chinese Relations: Past, Present and Future. Cape Town, South Africa, The Centre for Advanced Studies in African Societies, pp.367-389.
Bodomo, A. B. (2010). The African trading community in Guangzhou:
An emergingbridge for Africa-China relations. China Quarterly.
Burawoy, M. (1998). ‘The extend case study method’, Sociological
theory, Vol. 16, No 1: 4-33.
Chen Yu-Hua, Changing Marital Behavior and its impact on Fertility and
Aging in Taiwan. Paper presented at the international Conference on Low Fertility and Rapid Aging in East and South East Asian Societies, October 21, Dong-A University, Pusan, Korea.
Clifford, J., & Marcus, G. (1986). Writing Culture, The poetics and
Politics of ethnography, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Connell, R. W. (1987). Gender and Power: Society, the Person, and
Sexual Politics Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Connell, R. W. (2005). “Masculinities and Globalization.” Pp. 36–48 in
Gender through the Prism of Difference, 3d ed., edited by M. B. Zinn, P. Hondagneu-Sotelo, and M. A. Messner. New York: Oxford University Press.
Constable, N. (2003). Romance on a global stage, University of
California Press.
Constable, N. (2005). Cross-Border marriages: gender and mobility in
transnational Asia. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania
Press.
Cornyetz N. (1994). Fetishized Blackness: Hip Hop and Racial Desire
in Contemporary Japan Author(s): Social Text, No. 41 (Winter, 1994), pp. 113-139, Published by: Duke University Pres.
Fischer, L. R. (1983).'Mothers and Mothers-in-Law.' Journal of
Marriage and the Family 45:263–290.
Department of household registration affairs, Minister of Interior (2013).
Register number of marriages by nationality of spouses. www.moi.gov.tw/stat (access on march 15th 2013).
Department of National Immigration Agency (Police of immigration),
Minister of Interior (2013). Register number of foreigners holding valid residency. www.moi.gov.tw/stat (access on march15th 2013).
Fan, C. and Y.Q. Huang. 1998. Wives of Rural Brides: Female Marriage
Migration in China. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88(2): 227-251.
Freeman, C. ed. 2006. Marrying Up and Marrying Down: The Paradoxes
of Marital Mobility for Chosonjok Brides in South Korea. Cross-border Marriages: Gender and Mobility in Transnational Asia. Nicole Constable. 80-100. University of Pennsylvania Press.
Gilmore , D. (1990). “Men and Women in Southern Spain: Domestic Power “Revisited”. American Anthropologist, New Series, vol. 92, No. 4: 953-970.
Goddard, V. A. (2000). Gender, agency and change; anthropological
perspectives. London and New York, Routledge.
Han, M. and Eades, J.S. 1995. Brides, Bachelors and Brokers: The
Marriage Market in Rural Anhui in an Era of Economic Reform. Modern Asian Studies 29(4): 841-869.
Hiatt, L., R., (1984). Your Mother-In-Law is Poison, Source: Man, New
Series, Vol. 19, No. 2, 183-198.
Johnson, D. M. (2007), Race and Racism in the Chinas: Chinese Racial
Attitudes toward Africans and African-Americans, Bloomington,
In: Author House.
Johnson, C. L. (1989). 'In-Law Relationships in the American Kinship
System: The Impact of Divorce and Remarriage.' American Ethnologist 16:87–99.
Khon T. (1998 ) The Seduction of the Exotic: Notes on Mixed
Marriages in East Nepal in Breger R. and Hill Rosanna, Cross-Cultural Marriage, Identity and Choice, New York, New York: Oxford International Publishers Ltd.
Kim, H.K. (2012). Marriage Migration between South Korea and
Vietnam: A Gender Perspective. Asian Perspective 36(3):
531-563.
Ko C.F., (2012) Marital Power Relations and Family Life Asian-French
Couples Residing in France, Taiwan, Academia Sinica, EURAMERICA Vol. 42, No. 2 (June 2012), 249-279.
Lindahl, K. & Malik, N. (1999). “Observations of marital conflicts and
power relations with parenting in the triad”, Journal of marriage and the family, 61:320–330.
Li,Zhigang, Desheng Xue, Michael Lyons & Alison Brown. (2008). The
Social Space Analysis of Guangzhou Xiaobei African Enclave.
Acta Geographica Sinica, 63(2): 207-218.
Li, Zhignag, Desheng Xue, Feng Du & Yin Zhu. (2009). The local
responding of the globalized “transnational migration social space”: using African in Guangzhou Xiaobei as an example. Geographical Research, 28(4): 920-932.
Lu, M. C.-W. (2005). Commercially arranged marriage migration: Case
studies of cross-border marriages in Taiwan. Indian Journal of Gender Studies, 12, 2-3:275-303.
Lu, M. (2010). Asian Cross-border Marriage Migration- Demographic
Patterns and Social Issues. Amsterdam Press University.
Marcia C. I. (2011), Globalization and gametes: reproductive
tourism Islamic bioethics, and Middle Eastern modernity, Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520-8277, USA, Vol. 18, No. 1, April 2011, 87–103.
Massey, D.S., et al. (1993). Theories of international migration: a review
and appraisal. Population and Development Review 19(3): 431-466.
Meyer, J. P., Becker, T. E., & Van Dick, R. (2006). Social identities and
commitments at work: Toward and integrative model. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 27, 665-683.
Ndjio, B. (2007). Shanghai beauties and African desires: Migration,
Trade and Chinese Prostitution in Cameroon. Paper presented at the international conference ‘China in Africa: Who benefits? Interdisciplinary perspectives on China’s involvement in Africa’, Frankfurt, 14-15.12.2007.
Ndjio, B. (2012). These bitches are witches: Chinese prostitution and
the popular invention of 'witch-other' in Cameroon, Leiden Becker Charles Centre d'Etudes Africaines.
Piper, N, and Roces. M. (2003). Wife or worker? Worker or wife?
Marriageand Cross-border Migration in Contemporary Japan. International Journal of Population Geography 9: 457-469.
Piper, N. (2003). Introduction: Marriage ad migration in an age of
globalization. Piper. N. and Roces. M. eds. wife or Worker? Asian Women and Migration. Lanham. MS. Rowman and Littlefield.
Robinson, K. (1996). Of Mail-order Brides and Boys Own Tales:
Representations of Asian-Australian Marriages. Feminist Review 52: 53.
Serovich, J. and Price, S. (1994). 'In-Law Relationships: A Role Theory
Perspective.' International Journal of Sociology of the Family 24:127–146.
Strauss, A., & Corbin, J. (1998). Basics of Qualitative Research:
Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory. London: Sage Publications.
Suzuki, N. (2005). Tripartite Desires: Filipina-Japanese Marriages and
Fantasies of Transnational Traversal.124-144.
Taskeshita, S. (2010). Transnational Families among Muslims: The
Effect of Social Capital on Educational Strategies. 221-240. Yang and Chang. Eds. 2010. Asian cross-border marriage migration: demographic patterns and social issues. Amsterdam University Press: Amsterdam.
Thai, H.C. (2008). For Better or for Worse: Vietnamese International
Marriages in the New Global Economy. New Brunswick. NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Tien, C.Y. and Wang, H.Z. (2006). Masculinity and cross-border
marriages: Why do Taiwanese men seek Vietnamese women to Marry? Taiwan J. Southeast Asian Study 3(1): 1-36.
Tran, G.L. (2008). The impact of women’s international migration
through marriage on sending household and communities in Southeast Asia: The case study of three rural communes of Southern Vietnam. MA. Edn. The University of Western Ontario.
Tray, C. (2004). Marriage migration of women from China and Southeast
Asia to Taiwan. 173-191. Jones, Gavin W. and Ramdas, Kamalini. eds. (Un)tying the knot: Ideal and Reality in Asian marriage, Singapore, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore.
Tsai, T. (2001). A Study of Intermarriage between Taiwanese and
Vietnamese, unpublished thesis, the Graduate School of Political Economy, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan.
Tseng, Y.F. (2000). The mobility of entrepreneurs and capital: Taiwanese
capital-linked migration. International Migration 38(2): 143-166.
Tseng, Y. F. (2004). 2004. The politics of importing foreigners: Taiwan’s
foreign labor policy. Han Entzinger Hampshire ed. Migration between states and markets. UK: Ashgate Publishing.
Tseng Y.F. (2010). Marriage Migration to East Asia: Current Issues and
Propositions in Making Comparisons. 31-48. Yang and Lu. eds.
Asian Cross-border Marriage Migration- Demographic Patterns and Social Issues.
Uri D. and Shimelse A.(2012). In search of Global Middle Class, A new
Index, International Economic, (July 2012), 1-30
Wang, H.Z., Chang, S. M., (2002). The commodification of international
marriages: Cross-border marriage business in Taiwan and Vietnam. International Migration 40(6): 93-116.
Wang, H. (2007). Hidden spaces of resistance of the subordinated. Case
studies from Vietnamese female migrant partners in Taiwan. International Migration Reviews 41(3): 706-727.
Wang, H. and Belanger. D. (2008). Taiwanizing female immigrant
spouses and materializing differential citizenship. Citizenship Studies 12 (1): 91-106.
Wang, H.Z., and Chang, S.M. (2001). The commodification of
international marriages: Cross-border marriage business in Taiwan and Vietnam. International Migration 40(6): 93-116.
Wang H.Z. and Huang H. H., (2009) Cross borders marriages with Asia
Characters, Taipei, Center for Asian Pacific Area Studies, research Center for humanity and social science, Academia Sinica.
Wolfram, S. (1987). In-Laws and Out-Laws: Kinship and Marriage in
England. London: Croom Helm.
Wolf, M., (1972). Woman and the Family in Rural Taiwan, Stanford
University Press, Stanford, California.
Yang, W. S. and L. M. Chia-wen. eds. (2010). Asian Cross-border
Marriage. Demographic Patterns and Social Issues. Amsterdam 2919. Amsterdam University Press.
Zhou, Min. (2012). The Public Awareness, Ethnic Attitude and Social
Interaction Pattern of Guangzhou Locals and Africans in Guangzhou. Draft Paper for International Symposium on Migration and Intergroup Relations.
dc.identifier.urihttp://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/60667-
dc.description.abstract• Abstract
•
• This study examines the cross border marriages migration of Africans to Taiwan. It is based on one year and six month fieldwork among Afro-Taiwanese couples currently living in Taiwan. Most of the African interviewees are from West Africa, Central and South Africa. They came to Taiwan under different types of visas such as student visa, tourist visa, working visa and family visit visa.
• The empirical findings of my research showed that the Afro-Taiwanese cross-border marriage has been increasing most consistently and becoming a global trend rather than something exotic. On the one hand, it has its source in the effect of Taiwanese men’s migration to Africa for work and African migration to Taiwan for tourism, work, and studies on the other hand. It is mostly African men who marry Taiwanese women, but African women marrying Taiwanese men are less common.
• The primary reason the Taiwanese women chose to marry African men rather than Taiwanese men, American or Japanese men is their desire to find a lifelong partner. Similarly, the reason Taiwanese men married African women rather than local women are because they are fed up with local women’s materialistic tendencies. However, most of my informants stated that they marry their spouses because they love them. The specificity of the Afro-Taiwanese marriage is that none of my informants met his/her respective partner through the marriage agencies.
• My informants are well educated and belong mostly to middle class families. Parents from both sides opposed their children cross-border marriages because they believe that their children have married down. Moreover, sharing a common religion combined with their sexual life has played a significant role in their domestic power relationships and in dealing with cultural differentials. Finally, the African grooms are mostly involved in private businesses.
• This research aims to investigate the Afro-Taiwanese couples in cross-border marriages as there has never been in the past any study in my understanding made to specifically focus on the phenomenon. The thesis will generate new insights not ever been recorded in the literature, enlightening the differences between the Afro-Taiwanese cross-border marriages with the Southeast Asian cross-border marriages in Taiwan.
zh_TW
dc.description.abstract• Abstract
This study examines the cross border marriages migration of Africans to Taiwan. It is based on one year and six month fieldwork among Afro-Taiwanese couples currently living in Taiwan. Most of the African interviewees are from West Africa, Central and South Africa. They came to Taiwan under different types of visas such as student visa, tourist visa, working visa and family visit visa.
• The empirical findings of my research showed that the Afro-Taiwanese cross-border marriage has been increasing most consistently and becoming a global trend rather than something exotic. On the one hand, it has its source in the effect of Taiwanese men’s migration to Africa for work and African migration to Taiwan for tourism, work, and studies on the other hand. It is mostly African men who marry Taiwanese women, but African women marrying Taiwanese men are less common.
• The primary reason the Taiwanese women chose to marry African men rather than Taiwanese men, American or Japanese men is their desire to find a lifelong partner. Similarly, the reason Taiwanese men married African women rather than local women are because they are fed up with local women’s materialistic tendencies. However, most of my informants stated that they marry their spouses because they love them. The specificity of the Afro-Taiwanese marriage is that none of my informants met his/her respective partner through the marriage agencies.
• My informants are well educated and belong mostly to middle class families. Parents from both sides opposed their children cross-border marriages because they believe that their children have married down. Moreover, sharing a common religion combined with their sexual life has played a significant role in their domestic power relationships and in dealing with cultural differentials. Finally, the African grooms are mostly involved in private businesses.
• This research aims to investigate the Afro-Taiwanese couples in cross-border marriages as there has never been in the past any study in my understanding made to specifically focus on the phenomenon. The thesis will generate new insights not ever been recorded in the literature, enlightening the differences between the Afro-Taiwanese cross-border marriages with the Southeast Asian cross-border marriages in Taiwan.
en
dc.description.provenanceMade available in DSpace on 2021-06-16T10:25:21Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
ntu-102-R98125010-1.pdf: 2573583 bytes, checksum: 120cd0070847c1c2595d0f01bb27797f (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2013
en
dc.description.tableofcontentsTABLE OF CONTENTS
Page(s)
Oral Committee Approval Certificate
i
Acknowledgements - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
ii
Abstract - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
iii - iv
Table of Contents - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
v - vii
List of Tables - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
viii
List of Figures - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
ix
Chapter 1: Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1 - 6
Chapter 2: Literature Review and Methodological Approach - -
7 - 41
2.1. Research Site
7
2.1.1. Design of my site of fieldwork
8
2.1.2. Fieldwork
9
2.2. The state of Afro cross-border marriages and African
migrants in Taiwan
20
2.3. Data Analysis
23
2.4. Literature review: Globalizing cross-border marriages
25
2.4.1. How the cross-border marriage is discussed in Taiwan?
28
2.4.2. Cross-border marriages with Afro-Taiwanese characteristics
31
v i
Chapter 3: When Desires and Agencies of Afro-Taiwanese wives Defy the Usual Stereotypes - - - - - - - -
3.1. The paradox of economic power
42
3.2. Presentation of case studies
47
a) Presentation of John’s case study
48
b) Presentation of Norbert’s case study
52
c) Presentation of Weitali man’s case study
55
d) Presentation of Mr. Husta’s case study
59
3.3. African and Taiwanese wives’ agencies and desires
61
3.3.1. Taiwanese women and their desire for lifelong love
65
3.3.2. Longing for what they don’t have
68
Conclusion
71
Chapter 4: Afro-Taiwanese Couples and the Experiences of Social
Network - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
73 - 98
4.1 The experiences of social network in cross-border marriages
73
4.2. Presentation of cases studies
76
a) Presentation of Mr. Franky’s case study
76
b) Presentation of Dydy’s case study.
79
4.3. Trip to Taiwan, the different categories and roles of network
82
4.4. How did my informants get to know each other?
92
4.5. Parents and friends’ opinion
93
Conclusion
97
v i i
Chapter 5: Gender Ideology in the Afro-Taiwanese Cross-Border
Marriages - - - - - - - - - - - - -
99 - 133
5.1. Theoretical approach of patriarchy, hegemonic masculinity and gender ideology
100
5.2. Presentation of the case studies
103
a) Presentation of Rachel’s case study
103
b) Presentation of Lisa’s case study
108
c) Presentation of Nelia’s case study
114
d) Presentation of Mr. Lee’s case study
117
5.3. Finding another kind of woman
119
5.4. Desiring Black women or Chinese men
1232
5.5. What Kind of African men who marry Taiwanese women
127
Conclusion
132
Chapter 6: The Afro-Taiwanese Cross-Border Marriages and
Ambiguity of Domestic Power Relationships - - -
134 - 156
6.1. Marital power relationships, from nothing until becoming
someone
135
6.2. The ambiguity of family power from nothing until becoming someone
137
6.3. Afro-Taiwanese spouses with equal economic power
144
6.4. Sex as reproduction of masculinity in the Afro-Taiwanese cross-border marriages
151
Conclusion
154
Chapter 7: General Conclusion - - - - - - - - - -
157 - 159
References - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
170 - 167
Appendix - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
168 - 178
dc.language.isoen
dc.subject家庭權力關係zh_TW
dc.subject非洲台灣的跨國婚姻zh_TW
dc.subject社交網絡zh_TW
dc.subject經濟權力zh_TW
dc.subject性別文化zh_TW
dc.subjecteconomical poweren
dc.subjectAfro-Taiwanese cross-border marriagesen
dc.subjectsocial networksen
dc.subjectdomestic power relationshipen
dc.subjectgender cultureen
dc.title台灣的族群及婚姻: 以非裔台灣人跨國婚姻為例zh_TW
dc.titleMarriages and Races in Taiwan:
The Case of the Afro-Taiwanese Cross-Border Marriages
en
dc.typeThesis
dc.date.schoolyear101-2
dc.description.degree碩士
dc.contributor.oralexamcommittee呂欣怡(HSIN YI LU),馮涵棣(HEIDI FUNG)
dc.subject.keyword非洲台灣的跨國婚姻,社交網絡,經濟權力,性別文化,家庭權力關係,zh_TW
dc.subject.keywordAfro-Taiwanese cross-border marriages,social networks,economical power,gender culture,domestic power relationship,en
dc.relation.page178
dc.rights.note有償授權
dc.date.accepted2013-08-15
dc.contributor.author-college文學院zh_TW
dc.contributor.author-dept人類學研究所zh_TW
顯示於系所單位:人類學系

文件中的檔案:
檔案 大小格式 
ntu-102-1.pdf
  未授權公開取用
2.51 MBAdobe PDF
顯示文件簡單紀錄


系統中的文件,除了特別指名其著作權條款之外,均受到著作權保護,並且保留所有的權利。

社群連結
聯絡資訊
10617臺北市大安區羅斯福路四段1號
No.1 Sec.4, Roosevelt Rd., Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C. 106
Tel: (02)33662353
Email: ntuetds@ntu.edu.tw
意見箱
相關連結
館藏目錄
國內圖書館整合查詢 MetaCat
臺大學術典藏 NTU Scholars
臺大圖書館數位典藏館
本站聲明
© NTU Library All Rights Reserved