Creating a Man for the Future: A Narrative Analysis of Male In-Migrants and Their Constructions of Masculinities in a Rural Context
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11582Date
2016-10-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Most research on rural masculinity focuses on sedentary and agricultural lifestyles.
Based on fieldwork and interviews with 18 male newcomers, this article explores constructions
of masculinities among in-migrants engaged in several occupations and entrepreneurial
activities in Finnmark, in Northern Norway. Building on the concept of
hegemonic masculinities, we show how a specific combination of compact geography, a
changing labour market and the Nordic dual-earner family model and welfare state create
a rural space of opportunities in which male in-migrants construct themselves as men for
the future. The respondents emphasise the importance of intensive fatherhood, being a
supportive spouse, and commitment to leisure activities as well as their professional
identities. Contrary to studies of rural masculinities emphasising ‘macho’ traits, our
analysis demonstrates the prevalence of novel nonhegemonic masculinities among
in-migrants in northernmost Norway.
Description
Source at http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/soru.12111