Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space
This study explores the social construction of space in the lives of young immigrant women. Drawing upon data from photo-elicitation interviews, I analyze how young women who recently immigrated to Canada interpret and transform the meanings of spaces in their everyday lives. Using the social constr...
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Series: | The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography |
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Online Access: | https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/8620 |
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doaj-d15dcd28b63d434c93be4738e49601392021-08-02T16:05:32ZengDalhousie University LibrariesThe Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography2369-87212018-03-018132110.15273/jue.v8i1.86207791Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban SpaceSarah England0Dalhousie UniversityThis study explores the social construction of space in the lives of young immigrant women. Drawing upon data from photo-elicitation interviews, I analyze how young women who recently immigrated to Canada interpret and transform the meanings of spaces in their everyday lives. Using the social construction of space as a conceptual framework, I demonstrate how the social positions of young immigrant women are reflected in and negotiated through their use of urban space. While participants share perceptions of risk and experiences of gendered safety issues, all negotiate these issues by gaining spatial knowledge through exploration. They all also experience Otherness in various spaces. However, they construct belonging by developing diverse social networks, claiming space, and getting involved in the international community. It is evident that the city affects how, and whether, young immigrant women mobilize their identities as immigrants. New spaces bring new understandings of their identities as women, young people, and immigrants. This study illuminates how young immigrant women transform cities, and how, in turn, the city transforms them. Editor's note: This article won the 2017 Best Undergraduate Student Paper Prize of the Society for Urban, National, and Transnational / Global Anthropology (SUNTA).https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/8620immigrant womenurban spacegenderyouthphoto-elicitationparticipatory research |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sarah England |
spellingShingle |
Sarah England Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography immigrant women urban space gender youth photo-elicitation participatory research |
author_facet |
Sarah England |
author_sort |
Sarah England |
title |
Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space |
title_short |
Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space |
title_full |
Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space |
title_fullStr |
Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space |
title_full_unstemmed |
Picturing Halifax: Young Immigrant Women and the Social Construction of Urban Space |
title_sort |
picturing halifax: young immigrant women and the social construction of urban space |
publisher |
Dalhousie University Libraries |
series |
The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography |
issn |
2369-8721 |
publishDate |
2018-03-01 |
description |
This study explores the social construction of space in the lives of young immigrant women. Drawing upon data from photo-elicitation interviews, I analyze how young women who recently immigrated to Canada interpret and transform the meanings of spaces in their everyday lives. Using the social construction of space as a conceptual framework, I demonstrate how the social positions of young immigrant women are reflected in and negotiated through their use of urban space. While participants share perceptions of risk and experiences of gendered safety issues, all negotiate these issues by gaining spatial knowledge through exploration. They all also experience Otherness in various spaces. However, they construct belonging by developing diverse social networks, claiming space, and getting involved in the international community. It is evident that the city affects how, and whether, young immigrant women mobilize their identities as immigrants. New spaces bring new understandings of their identities as women, young people, and immigrants. This study illuminates how young immigrant women transform cities, and how, in turn, the city transforms them.
Editor's note: This article won the 2017 Best Undergraduate Student Paper Prize of the Society for Urban, National, and Transnational / Global Anthropology (SUNTA). |
topic |
immigrant women urban space gender youth photo-elicitation participatory research |
url |
https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/8620 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sarahengland picturinghalifaxyoungimmigrantwomenandthesocialconstructionofurbanspace |
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