Title of article
Between Danger and Pleasure: Rethinking the Imperilled Filipina Migrant Body in Jose Dalisay’s Soledad’s Sister
Author/Authors
chin, grace v.s. universiti sains malaysia (usm) - school of humanities, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia
From page
121
To page
142
Abstract
This article explores the complexities and tensions of negotiating female agencyand freedom by examining the theme of danger and pleasure through the representationof the Filipina migrant body in Jose Dalisay’s Soledad’s Sister. Of interest here is theFilipina migrant body’s negotiation between the danger posed by the patriarchal systemsof the global economy and the pleasure of self- and sexual discovery, for it highlights theempowering possibilities and opportunities that can be found in the very same transnationalspaces where dangers also lurk. Subjected to local and global patriarchal discourses –including motherhood and martyrdom – and their prescribed limits, the Filipina migrantbody is rendered marginal, displaced and inferior. Despite these limits however, I arguethat the migrant body-in-transition should be considered a corporeal “third” space thatholds multiple meanings and liminal possibilities that can engender significant changesin identity, voice and agency. Using postcolonial and gender theories, this article problematises the prevailing, authoritative discourses on migrant identity, subjection and subjectivity by showing how the novel undermines essentialist assumptions associated with the stereotyped helper through the exploration of sexual pleasure in the dangerous phallocentric spaces of the global economy.
Keywords
Filipina migrant body , gender , sexuality , Philippine literature , domestic helper
Journal title
Jurnal Kemanusiaan
Journal title
Jurnal Kemanusiaan
Record number
2665167
Link To Document