英文摘要 |
This paper investigates the motif of ''home'' to examine the multiple identities of Southeast Asian marriage migrants in Taiwan, women who cross boundaries between the inner and outer realms of the domestic sphere. In particular, it explores how sociopolitical documentaries interact with the contemporary discourse and cultural production. Considering ''home'' as a double social space, both a contact zone between different cultures and a practical space for daily life, this paper adopts a gender perspective to analyze three documentaries: Out/Marriage (2012), The Immortal's Play (2016), and Let's Not Be Afraid (2010). These documentaries distinctly demonstrate the different stages and processes of subject and hegemonies and investigates the interventional act of documentaries as they may affect the formation of subjectivity, gendered roles, and identities of Southeast Asian marriage migrants in Taiwan.identity construction, thus to reveal the multilayered cultural differences and power structures that wrestle with each other in the home space. Through the cinematic analysis of these documentaries, this paper analyzes the symbolic meanings of home and identifies marriage migrants' varied strategies for negotiation and resistance. Moreover, it addresses representational politics to explore the practical functions of documentary filmmaking. Adopting transnational feminism and documentary analysis, it demonstrates the dynamic construction of ''home'' in relation to scattered |