Towards a psychoanalytic migration studies: A son, a brother, a father, an American, and his house in a Cameroonian village

Abstract Around the world, migrants are building houses in their countries-of-origin. For the women and men who create them, these houses are unambiguously significant. Yet, in academic migration studies, they are often seen as peripheral—interesting rather than important. This article follows recen...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMigration studies Vol. 9; no. 3; pp. 1195 - 1214
Main Author Page, Ben
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford University Press 01.09.2021
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2049-5838
2049-5846
2049-5846
DOI10.1093/migration/mnab027

Cover

Abstract Abstract Around the world, migrants are building houses in their countries-of-origin. For the women and men who create them, these houses are unambiguously significant. Yet, in academic migration studies, they are often seen as peripheral—interesting rather than important. This article follows recent work that aims to show why these houses really do matter. These houses are where migrants can seek to process the trauma of the disconnection that is inherent in migration and are how they repress the anxieties that arise from transnationalism. Migrants’ emotions are externalised onto the house. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Cameroon between 2013 and 2018, this article develops a case study about one transnational migrant, his family, and his house. It uses the example to develop two arguments: first that these houses sit within transnational networks, but the networks are subject-centred so a theory of the subject is needed to analyse them. Secondly, that human subjects make a deal when they exchange infantile egocentrism for collective inter-subjectivity, which is similar to the deal made between transnational migrants and their ancestral home when they receive permission to leave in exchange for continuing to connect—a link that is materialised in the house. Both these arguments combine to support an underlying claim that migration studies in general, and studies of migrant housing in particular would benefit from building further on existing work that draws on psychoanalytical approaches.
AbstractList Abstract Around the world, migrants are building houses in their countries-of-origin. For the women and men who create them, these houses are unambiguously significant. Yet, in academic migration studies, they are often seen as peripheral—interesting rather than important. This article follows recent work that aims to show why these houses really do matter. These houses are where migrants can seek to process the trauma of the disconnection that is inherent in migration and are how they repress the anxieties that arise from transnationalism. Migrants’ emotions are externalised onto the house. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Cameroon between 2013 and 2018, this article develops a case study about one transnational migrant, his family, and his house. It uses the example to develop two arguments: first that these houses sit within transnational networks, but the networks are subject-centred so a theory of the subject is needed to analyse them. Secondly, that human subjects make a deal when they exchange infantile egocentrism for collective inter-subjectivity, which is similar to the deal made between transnational migrants and their ancestral home when they receive permission to leave in exchange for continuing to connect—a link that is materialised in the house. Both these arguments combine to support an underlying claim that migration studies in general, and studies of migrant housing in particular would benefit from building further on existing work that draws on psychoanalytical approaches.
Author Page, Ben
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Ben
  orcidid: 0000-0003-2833-8137
  surname: Page
  fullname: Page, Ben
  email: b.page@ucl.ac.uk
  organization: Department of Geography, University College London, London, WC1H 0AP, UK
BookMark eNqNkE1qwzAQhUVJoWmaA3SnA8SNZMu23F0I_YNAN-najC0pVrElI9kNppevQkLWnc08Zr73YOYezYw1EqFHSp4oKZJ1pw8OBm3NujNQkTi_QfOYsCJKOctmV53wO7T0_puEKnISZ_kc_e7tEZzwGHDvp7qxYKCdBl3jayj2wyi09M94g701q4BWzg6NdCep4KIM3nTS6RpOhBG40R43dvQSaxO4LYSttUYH8Ee3LRzkA7pV0Hq5vPQF-np92W_fo93n28d2s4vqmPMh4jJXscjicFmdUQbAsoJxKpWqilQqSUDwgogwVhUlOU2pqJhIlEiZZKyqkwWKz7mj6WE6QtuWvdMduKmkpDx9sLweW14-GEyrs8mO_T_wPyMJe0g
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1177_01979183231170812
crossref_primary_10_1080_01419870_2023_2292641
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. 2021
Copyright_xml – notice: The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. 2021
DBID TOX
ADTOC
UNPAY
DOI 10.1093/migration/mnab027
DatabaseName Oxford Journals Open Access Collection
Unpaywall for CDI: Periodical Content
Unpaywall
DatabaseTitleList
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: TOX
  name: Oxford Journals Open Access (Activated by CARLI)
  url: https://academic.oup.com/journals/
  sourceTypes: Publisher
– sequence: 2
  dbid: UNPAY
  name: Unpaywall
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://unpaywall.org/
  sourceTypes: Open Access Repository
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Political Science
EISSN 2049-5846
EndPage 1214
ExternalDocumentID 10.1093/migration/mnab027
GroupedDBID 0R~
4.4
48X
AAJQQ
AAMZS
AAPQZ
AAPXW
AARHZ
AAUAY
AAUOS
AAUQX
AAVAP
ABDFA
ABEJV
ABGNP
ABJNI
ABKEB
ABPQP
ABPTD
ABQLI
ABWST
ABXVV
ACDXO
ACGFS
ACOZV
ACVJI
ADBKU
ADGZP
ADIPN
ADLMC
ADLOL
ADNBA
ADQBN
ADQIT
ADZJE
AFFZL
AFIQY
AFOFC
AGINJ
AGQXC
AIDGQ
AJNCP
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ATGXG
AVWKF
BAYMD
BCRHZ
BEYMZ
BHZBG
BZYEK
DAKXR
EBS
EJD
ETYVG
FLUFQ
FOEOM
FQBLK
GAOTZ
GJXCC
H13
HZ~
JXSIZ
KBUDW
KOP
KSI
KSN
MJWOD
NOMLY
O9-
OAIJC
OJZSN
OKKKP
OXVUA
PLIXB
ROX
RXO
TOX
YADRA
YAJVU
YKOAZ
YXANX
~SN
ADTOC
AGORE
AHGBF
AJBYB
NU-
UNPAY
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c288t-8e7f2d62ab0c614aa469481effb95efe0ad890da46fb107151db4d3fd54e44bc3
IEDL.DBID UNPAY
ISSN 2049-5838
2049-5846
IngestDate Tue Aug 19 15:49:53 EDT 2025
Wed Apr 02 07:04:25 EDT 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess true
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 3
Keywords transnationalism
name-of-the-father
remittance houses
psychoanalysis
migrant houses
cameroon
Language English
License This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
cc-by-nc
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c288t-8e7f2d62ab0c614aa469481effb95efe0ad890da46fb107151db4d3fd54e44bc3
ORCID 0000-0003-2833-8137
OpenAccessLink https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://academic.oup.com/migration/article-pdf/9/3/1195/41778627/mnab027.pdf
PageCount 20
ParticipantIDs unpaywall_primary_10_1093_migration_mnab027
oup_primary_10_1093_migration_mnab027
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2021-09-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2021-09-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 09
  year: 2021
  text: 2021-09-01
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationTitle Migration studies
PublicationYear 2021
Publisher Oxford University Press
Publisher_xml – name: Oxford University Press
SSID ssj0000970267
Score 2.181558
Snippet Abstract Around the world, migrants are building houses in their countries-of-origin. For the women and men who create them, these houses are unambiguously...
SourceID unpaywall
oup
SourceType Open Access Repository
Publisher
StartPage 1195
Title Towards a psychoanalytic migration studies: A son, a brother, a father, an American, and his house in a Cameroonian village
URI https://academic.oup.com/migration/article-pdf/9/3/1195/41778627/mnab027.pdf
UnpaywallVersion publishedVersion
Volume 9
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwrV3PT8IwFH4ROOhF8VfEH6QHPekYrN3YvBEiMR7QAyR4Iu3WAhEGgaFR_3lfWYfEizHx1q1v6_q2dN_L-75XgEslfYXAoW4xVqUWQ0BgCVdQS-CvuR4i5HDCVbXPtnffZQ89t2fk0VoLww0rvJJJGiajQeoK27jSmkXKDmxq62JlNqvpAmg6fo-5wBCrgr05KHg63ZSHQrf91HjW-8shENYCI_-7zbwsyRnQjVHMfTK92_YynvH3Nz4eb_x2WnswyR44ZZu8VJaJqIQfP2o5_teMirBr8ClppNfsw5aMD6BoWHLYYdaCQ_jsrAi3C8JJquTiurwJGpH1yGSRkhRvSYMgrL9BUzFfKb50U3HTikmWNtIHERmOFmQ4XS4kGcVo1-TYO8WlBw1f9R5JA3kE3dZdp3lvmZ0crNDx_cTyZV05kefghELEA5xjUM78mlRKBK5UssojP6hGeFoJjEcRhUSCRVRFLpOMiZAeQz6exvIECBVhNaSIq5RDGfdqnPrK9YSgIqjzwOUluEJH92dprY5-mmOn_fXU-8atJbhev9rfrU__ZH0GO46mvqyoaOeQT-ZLeYHYJRFlyHUee2XzYX4BGmryFQ
linkProvider Unpaywall
linkToUnpaywall http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwrV3NT8IwFG8UDnpR_Ir4lR70pGOwdl_eCJEQD8QDJHha2q0FIgzCNo36z_u6dUi8GBNv3fq2rm9L93t5v98rQtdSeBKAg2tQ2iQGBUBgcJsTg8Ov2Q0BclhhXu2z7_SG9HFkj7Q8WmlhmGaFN0pJw3w6Llxhalcay0iavklMVazMpC1VAE3F7zHjEGI1oHcbVR2Vbqqg6rD_1H5W-8sBEFYCI--7TZ0yyemTjVH0fUq9204WL9n7G5vNNn473X00Lx-4YJu8NLKUN8KPH7Uc_2tGNbSn8SluF9ccoC0RH6KaZslBh14LjtDnICfcJpjhQsnFVHkTMMLrkXFSkBTvcRsDrL8DU77KFV-qKZluxbhMG6mDCE-mCZ4sskTgaQx2HQa9C1h6wPBV7ZE0Fsdo2H0YdHqG3snBCC3PSw1PuNKKHAsmFAIeYAyCcuq1hJTct4UUTRZ5fjOC05JDPAooJOI0IjKyqaCUh-QEVeJFLE4RJjxshgRwlbQIZU6LEU_aDueE-y7zbVZHN-DoYFnU6giKHDsJ1lMPtFvr6Hb9an-3PvuT9TnatRT1JaeiXaBKusrEJWCXlF_pT_ILcsjw-Q
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Towards+a+psychoanalytic+migration+studies%3A+A+son%2C+a+brother%2C+a+father%2C+an+American%2C+and+his+house+in+a+Cameroonian+village&rft.jtitle=Migration+studies&rft.au=Page%2C+Ben&rft.date=2021-09-01&rft.pub=Oxford+University+Press&rft.issn=2049-5838&rft.eissn=2049-5846&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=1195&rft.epage=1214&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Fmigration%2Fmnab027&rft.externalDocID=10.1093%2Fmigration%2Fmnab027
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=2049-5838&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=2049-5838&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=2049-5838&client=summon