’New Perspectives on Mutual Dependency in Care-Giving is an important and illuminating study of gender, ethnicity and care. The analysis of social relationships between Czech nannies, Vietnamese children and their working parents is brilliant and fascinating. Adéla Souralová is an intelligent and creative young scholar. She deserves thousands of readers.’ Lise Widding Isaksen, University of Bergen, Norway ’This book fills an important gap in the migration and care literature by considering a little documented care configuration: immigrant women who employ local women to look after their children. Souralova gives heartfelt voice to the often conflicting perspectives of Vietnamese immigrant mothers, Czech grannies and second generation children to deliver innovative ideas about care-giving as a formative activity based in mutual dependencies.’ Loretta Baldassar, University of Western Australia, Australia
Introduction: ‘Where do the children play?’; ‘We are here alone’: the hiring decision in the struggle for family resettlement; ‘We need each other’: childcare as a paid and fulfilling activity; ‘Everything for us but nothing with us’: the meaning of motherhood, delegation of care work and its consequences; ‘From nanny to granny’: caring as kinning; ‘Europe is my brain, Asia is my heart’: grandmotherland and kinning as home-bonding; Conclusion: mutual dependency, emotionality, and kinship ties in care-giving; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.