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    Title: 跨國做家庭:傳播科技的性別政治
    Doing family in a transnational context: the gender politics of communication technologies
    Authors: 許峯源
    Hsu, Feng Yuan
    Contributors: 康庭瑜
    Kang, Ting Yu
    許峯源
    Hsu, Feng Yuan
    Keywords: 跨國家庭
    跨國溝通
    傳播科技
    性別政治
    Transnational family
    Transnational communication
    Communication technologies
    Gender politics
    Date: 2014
    Issue Date: 2015-05-01 11:30:18 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: 本研究藉由深度訪問18位前往澳洲打工旅遊的女兒,討論跨國家庭中的移民決策、跨國傳播與傳播科技分配的性別政治。本文理論視角強調跨國家庭的異質性。基於各成員如何理解赴澳打工旅遊的移民決策,以及跨國後的溝通責任、傳播科技資源的分配。分析中指出三點。第一,家庭策略與個人動機的協商過程中,赴澳打工旅遊者動用不同的溝通策略:選擇隱瞞或受保護論述,進而說服家庭。兩種策略建立於性別離/返的差異。第二,跨國溝通基於不同的移民決策過程,分為兩種詮釋,一為維繫親密關係,二為管教與監控。跨國溝通中,基於家庭的性別分工,依然是以母親作為主要的聯繫者。資料顯示受訪者對於父母的不同詮釋,形成不可欲的母職,以及工具性的父職,而父親由於缺席於跨國溝通中,被詮釋成「理性」的角色。第三,由於家庭成員的離家,導致傳播科技資源的重新分配。多數家庭中,母親較不會使用傳播科技,教導母親學習傳播科技時,母親則被描述為學不會,若教父親,則是不想學。基於以上三點,本文強調「跨國做家庭」時,性別不平等在跨國家庭中的重組,以及對於傳播科技資源分配之影響。
    By conducting 18 in-depth interviews with female working holiday makers, this thesis examines the gender politics of the decision-making process, transnational communication and communication technologies. In the fourth chapter, data shows the female working holiday makers use different communication strategies to negotiate with parents, especially when the personal agenda and family strategies are in conflict. The communication strategies are based on the gendered expectations in Taiwanese families. The informants utilize these expectations to convince their parents that working holiday benefits them.
    In the fifth chapter, I analyze the continuing negotiation between parents and daughters. It affects the quality of transnational communication. It shows 2 different communication patterns. First of them is intimacy-maintaining and the other one is discipline/surveillance. Due to the gender division of domestic labor, in most of the Taiwanese families, the mothers make the transnational phone call, try to maintain intimacy with daughters in Australia. On one hand, the informants construe the intensive long-distance mothering as unwanted and emotional. On the other hand, the fathers are mostly absent in transnational communication. Compared with the mothers being too emotional, the informants interpret this absence as “rational.”
    I examine the politics of communication technologies in the sixth chapter. When the family is ‘transnationalizing,’ the family members have the opportunity to gain more access to ICTs. This study identifies the different gendered processes of digital empowerment. Firstly, mothers are less expected to be tech-savvy in the process of bridging digital divide. When the family is transnationalizing, the ICTs are indispensable to parents for maintaining intimacy. Therefore, the less tech-savvy parents are taught how to use the ICTs to communicate with transnational daughters. However, mothers are always described as “clumsy” and “can not learn it well” while fathers are expected to be more interested in ICTs, especially in computers. Secondly, fathers are still considered more tech-savvy regardless of their actual capability. A few informants find their fathers do not use ICTs as well as their mothers do, they construe their fathers as “not wanting to learn” rather than “not able to learn it well.” In the process of bridging digital divide in transnational families, the ICTs are still part of the masculine culture that discourages mothers from further digital empowerment. Except for the discouragement in the gendered process, few of my informants’ mothers are more structurally limited. I use the term “gendered mobility” to describe the structural limitation on mothers’ access to ICTs. Gendered mobility refers to how mothers’ geographical mobility is limited to family space and depends on other family members, such as husbands or children. Therefore, the ICTs, especially mobile devices, are not necessary for mothers, because of their limited mobility. Most of the mothers need social support to access ICTs for transnational communication.
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    Description: 碩士
    國立政治大學
    新聞研究所
    101451002
    103
    Source URI: http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/record/#G0101451002
    Data Type: thesis
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Journalism] Theses

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