Transnational family reunions as lived experience: Narrating a Salvadoran autoethnography

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Abstract

This article explores the complex processes and emotions that characterise transnational family reunion. Using the tools of experimental ethnography, it unpacks the experiences of Marcela, a young Australian-Salvadoran, who embarked on a family reunion with members of her transnationally dispersed family in various locales: London (Ontario), Los Angeles, various towns in El Salvador, and Managua in Nicaragua. Her account of the family reunion affords an opportunity to understand the cultural complexities and emotional dynamics of these events. The encounters between guests (Marcela's family) and hosts gave rise to issues of reciprocity, envy, and guest-host dynamics. These dynamics were place specific, resulting in a much higher degree of spontaneity in encounters with other exiled family members, indicating both the shared experiences of exile and the realities, and perceptions, of socio-economic status. While the politics of reciprocity was an explicit feature in all trans-national encounters experienced by Marcela's family, it was Marcela's "cultural Australianness" that served as a constant reminder of how becoming a trans-national had changed her permanently and marked her out from her kin.

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APA

Ramirez, M., Skrbis, Z., & Emmison, M. (2007). Transnational family reunions as lived experience: Narrating a Salvadoran autoethnography. Identities, 14(4), 411–431. https://doi.org/10.1080/10702890701578456

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