Planning Families in Nepal
pages, 6 x 9
11 figures, 1 table
Paperback
Release Date:29 Mar 2016
ISBN:9780813578613
Hardcover
Release Date:29 Mar 2016
ISBN:9780813578620
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Planning Families in Nepal

Global and Local Projects of Reproduction

Rutgers University Press
Based on almost a decade of research in the Kathmandu Valley, Planning Families in Nepal offers a compelling account of Hindu Nepali women as they face conflicting global and local ideals regarding family planning. 
 
Promoting a two-child norm, global family planning programs have disseminated the slogan, “A small family is a happy family,” throughout the global South. Jan Brunson examines how two generations of Hindu Nepali women negotiate this global message of a two-child family and a more local need to produce a son. Brunson explains that while women did not prefer sons to daughters, they recognized that in the dominant patrilocal family system, their daughters would eventually marry and be lost to other households. As a result, despite recent increases in educational and career opportunities for daughters, mothers still hoped for a son who would bring a daughter-in-law into the family and care for his aging parents. Mothers worried about whether their modern, rebellious sons would fulfill their filial duties, but ultimately those sons demonstrated an enduring commitment to living with their aging parents. In the context of rapid social change related to national politics as well as globalization—a constant influx of new music, clothes, gadgets, and even governments—the sons viewed the multigenerational family as a refuge. 
 
Throughout Planning Families in Nepal, Brunson raises important questions about the notion of “planning” when applied to family formation, arguing that reproduction is better understood as a set of local and global ideals that involve actors with desires and actions with constraints, wrought with delays, stalling, and improvisation.
 
An insightful and beautifully written account of how family planning decisions are made and preferences are formed among Hindu Nepali women … This is an outstanding ethnography of caste-Hindu people living in Kathmandu today, written from the perspective of [a] demographic anthropologist. It will not disappoint scholars and students of this region and subject, and would make an excellent addition to a reading list for upper-level undergraduate or graduate-level teaching. Medical Anthropology Quarterly
Jan Brunson skillfully weaves keen ethnographic observation with incisive social scientific analysis to provide a sensitive and nuanced account of gender and reproduction in an increasingly globalized Nepal. Geoff Childs, Washington University in St. Louis
JAN BRUNSON is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, in Honolulu. 
        Acknowledgments
        Note on Transliteration, Transcription, and Pronunciation
Introduction: Life in Motion
1     Intersections: Gender, Class, and Caste in Nepal
2     Like a Potter’s Wheel: From Daughters to Mothers-in-Law
3     The Elusive Small, Happy Family
4     Son Preference and the Preferences of Sons
5     Conclusion: Projects of Reproduction
        Appendix A:  Caste Hierarchy in Nepal
       Appendix B:  Trends in Contraceptive Use in Nepal
       Notes
       Bibliography
       Index
 
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