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Prologue Introduction 1. China’s Modernisation: A Generational Leap 2. Growing Up, Gender, and Education in China 3. One-Child Migrants in the UK: The Decision-Making Process, Mobility Trajectory and Parental Involvement 4. The One-Child Family as a Transnational Dynamic Field: Money, Childcare and Aspiration 5. Between Space and Time: Long-Term Home-Making in Britain and in China Conclusion
As the grown children of one-child Chinese families migrate to other parts of the world, Lu asks, how do they balance their overseas aspirations and family relations with their parents in China. She conducted her sociological study among both the one-child generation of Chinese migrants in Britain and their parents in China, who were separated from their only child. The study looks at growing up as a single child in China, deciding to migrate, the transnational one-child family, and long-term home-making in Britain and China.
'This is a nuanced and beautifully written ethnography of the experiences of Chinese students in the United Kingdom. The vivid, engaging stories Tu Mengwei tells about their lives will give readers a deep understanding of their complex relationships with the United Kingdom, China, and their parents who remain in China.'
'This is one of the most engaging, beautifully written books I have read in while. It represents such an important piece of scholarship on migration and educational trajectories between the UK and China. The perspective on the complex gender relations and expectations within Chinese families is particularly illuminating. This book will undoubtedly have a wide readership and will be of interest to anyone working at the intersections of migration, transnationalism and education and the Chinese family.'