“We will treat you well because you are helping our nation”: Migrant Wives and Functionalist Visions of Belonging in South Korea

Joshua Allen
PhD student, Global Gender and Sexuality Studies, University at Buffalo.

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Abstract

Over the last three decades, cross-border marriages between non-Korean women and Korean men have become increasingly common, comprising between 4% and 10% of all annual marriages in South Korea since 2005. In this article, I explore the historically evolving gendered, racialized, and classed normativities that migrant wives have confronted during this period. Triangulating between state-collected statistical data; ethnographic, demographic, and legal studies on migrant wives in Korea; and the country’s changing laws and policies on marriage migration, I show how these normativities, or what I term “functionalist visions of belonging,” have defined the legitimacy of migrant wives’ presence primarily in terms of their imagined use-values. I suggest that migrant wives have been interpellated by at least three analytically distinct functionalist visions of belonging over the past three decades: (1) ethnonational, which interpellated them in terms of “blood (dis)similarities”; (2) social-Confucian, which interpellated them in terms of their ability to fulfill gendered Confucian social roles; and (3) biopolitical, which interpellated them in terms of their biological-reproductive potential and also as the molders, not merely the bearers, of future Korean citizens.

Keywords: South Korea, marriage migration, gender governance, ethno-national identity, social Confucianism, biopolitics

Funding: No funding was received for this research and publication.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declared no conflicts of interest.
Article History: Received: 11 April 2024. Revised: 14 May 2024. Accepted: 16 May 2024.. First published: 19 May 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 by the author/s.
License: Critical Gender Studies Network (CGSN), India. Distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Published by: Critical Gender Studies Network (CGSN)
Citation: Allen, J. (2024). “We will treat you well because you are helping our nation”: Migrant Wives and Functionalist Visions of Belonging in South Korea. Critical Gender Studies Journal. 1:1. https://cgsjournal.com/v1/n1/v1n104.pdf

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