Marriage migration and family reunification have become one of the few ways for migrants from former French colonies to gain legal entry to France. As a result, love, marriage, and kinship have become central to the politics of contemporary border control. Based on extensive research with Franco-Malagasy families in southwestern France, this article examines how couples negotiate the complexities of their binational relationships in the context of state-fostered xenophobia and suspicion. I suggest the analytic of a working mis/understanding to capture how these marriages operate. While at one level the working mis/understanding enables Malagasy women and French men to bridge their different notions of kinship, at another level it naturalizes a long-standing colonial relationship between France and Madagascar. I further consider how the sociocultural dynamics of the working mis/understanding illuminate how state regulations produce the commodification of intimate relations allegedly intrinsic to these marriages. © by the American Anthropological Association.
CITATION STYLE
Cole, J. (2014). Working mis/understandings: The Tangled relationship between kinship, Franco-Malagasy binational marriages, and the French state. Cultural Anthropology, 29(3), 527–551. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca29.3.05
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.