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White migrant masculinities in Thailand and the paradoxes of Western privilege
Authors:Kristen Hill Maher  Megan Lafferty
Institution:1. Department of Political Science, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA, kmaher@mail.sdsu.edu;2. School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia
Abstract:This study examines the counter-paradigmatic migration of Westerners into Thailand, focusing on men in transnational intimate relationships in the northeastern region. We explore how the particular spaces in which they settled affected these migrants' capacities to perform what they saw as hegemonic masculinities over time. We find that they initially experienced an increase in status that they were able to convert into assets in romantic relationships, permitting them to position themselves as ‘providers’ and ‘real white men,’ drawing on masculine ideals from their home countries as well as a diffuse neocolonial imaginary. In the long run, however, these identity constructions were subject to internal contradictions and attrition. They were also place-bound, creating both financial and social obstacles to a return home, particularly for those without ties to transnational capital. The ways these patterns differ from those in existing scholarship underline how both the particular spaces of migrant settlement and temporal dimensions are critical for the analysis of migrant masculinities.
Keywords:masculinity  migration  expatriate  Thailand  whiteness  transnational relationships
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