ABSTRACT

In many parts of South-East Asia, women's lifestyles are going through enormous changes as women move from traditional rural, agricultural lifestyles to modern, urban lifestyles, which often involve migration to cities, taking on paid work, and having a quite different relationship with their families. This book, based on intensive research among the women of the Bidayuh people in Sarawak, all of them first generation migrant wage workers, explores the extent to which women's lifestyles are changing, and the reasons which prompt women to make the changes. How far are such women driven by economic considerations, how far by dissatisfaction with traditional lifestyles, and how far by the appeal of a glamorous urban lifestyle? The author's research includes detailed interviews in the field, and much of this interview material is included in the book, thereby enabling the Bidayuh women to tell their own stories as they grapple with the rapid changes swirling around them.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

A methodological discussion

chapter 3|8 pages

Doing fieldwork at home

chapter 4|14 pages

The socio-economic context of change

chapter 5|21 pages

To market, to market

Rural–urban migration and becoming modern

chapter 6|18 pages

Overqualified and underpaid

Wage work in the personal services sector

chapter 7|11 pages

Sex and salaries

Single women migrants in the city

chapter 8|17 pages

Marriage, money and men

Working mothers and their households

chapter 9|17 pages

The hand that rocks the cradle leaves wage work

Bidayuh housewives

chapter 10|16 pages

Holding their own

Four women and their stories

chapter 11|4 pages

Conclusion