Modern distress and lifestyle migration: The false promise of a pure relationship with one's self

Rotem Kliger, Carol A. Kidron

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study presents a qualitative ethnographic exploration of professionally successful lifestyle migrants' self-perceptions of premigration etiologies of “modern distress,” and postmigration pathways of healing and outcomes in Guatemala. Reflexive accounts of perceived etiologies of distress include self-commodification, atomization, and disengagement from “true-selves” as stressors motivating relocation. Migrants depict postmigration healing practices as embedding popularized therapeutic narratives that amplify introspective self-dialog reproducing hypercapitalist and emotional capitalist “liquid-modern” unstable and disengaged selfhood. Constituting what we term a “pure relationship with the self,” lifestyle migrants describe a “modern trap” of “addictive” chronic healing, self-seeking, and unfulfillment while resultant self-deliberations continue to exhibit no less liquid and potentially adaptive life paths. Implications will be considered pertaining to self-dialogic therapeutic processes that reproduce distressed liquid selfhood and the potential of sites of self-relocation to amplify socially disengaged introspection. Yet reflexive self-dialog problematizes reductionist readings of structural subjectification, calling for further examination of the way distressed selfhood is a product of shifting social structures and zeitgeists but no less a self-crafted outcome of self-deliberation that critically evaluates emergent selves and alternative contexts of self-constitution.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)449-466
Number of pages18
JournalEthos
Volume52
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • distress
  • lifestyle migration
  • liquid modernity
  • self-dialog
  • selfhood

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Anthropology
  • Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
  • Sociology and Political Science

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