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Paths to Middle-Class Mobility among Second-Generation Moroccan Immigrant Women in Israel (Hardcover)
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Paths to Middle-Class Mobility among Second-Generation Moroccan Immigrant Women in Israel (Hardcover)
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While first-generation immigrant women often begin their lives at
the bottom of their new societies, the fates of their adult
daughters can be very different. Still, little research has been
done to examine the opportunities or constraints that
second-generation women face and the class achievements they make.
In this volume, author Beverly Mizrachi presents an in-depth study
of 40?-50-year-old Moroccan women whose parents made up part of the
largest ethnic group to enter Israel after its establishment in
1948 and whose mothers began their new lives at the bottom of the
economic and social ladder. Through her analysis of the life
history narratives of these women, Mizrachi reveals that they used
a range and number of sites to achieve an impressive mobility into
the low, middle, and high segments of the middle class. Mizrachi's
findings have implications for studying the middle-class mobility
of second-generation immigrant women from subordinate groups in
other Western societies. Paths to Middle-Class Mobility among
Second-Generation Moroccan Immigrant Women in Israel begins by
examining the historical background and culture of Jewish
communities in Morocco that affected the mobility resources of the
first, immigrant generation of Moroccan women in Israel and those
accrued by the second generation. Mizrachi goes on to analyze the
life history narratives of a group of six second-generation
Moroccan women to show how they used their education, employment,
gendered spousal relationships, motherhood, residential mobility,
and the body to achieve their middle-class mobility. Ultimately,
she finds that these women used their human agency and social
structures over these multiple social sites to reach their class
goals for themselves and their children while simultaneously
constructing new classed and ethnicized feminine identities.
Mizrachi's findings integrate issues of gender, ethnicity,
immigration, and class mobility in a single intriguing study. Her
volume will appeal to students and teachers of sociology,
anthropology, ethnography, and Middle East studies as well as
readers interested in immigration and women's studies.
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