Abstract

Many of Vienna’s labor migrants who entered Austria as so-called “guest workers” together with their spouses long nurtured the dream of returning to their country of origin, at the latest when they retired. By then, however, returning became less than straightforward leading to ambivalence regarding questions of belonging/return and transnational mobility and late-life care. Based on rich qualitative data, in this article, I show that ambivalences are found in the complexity of migrants’ narratives, particularly in the way they (1) reassess past choices, (2) negotiate feelings of belonging, and (3) assess future options for late life and care. I argue that the social dimension of ambivalence, which I term “relational ambivalence,” is crucial to understanding the labor migrants’ experiences, reflections, and choices. The analysis shows that ambivalence must be understood as a product of relationships rather than solely an individual experience. The concept of relational ambivalence captures these social and discursive dimensions of ambivalence. The article ultimately carves out the particularity of ambivalence in the general context of migration and in the specific context of Vienna’s labor migrants, while accepting feelings of ambivalence or the simultaneity of different, opposing positions in one and the same person as a core human experience.

Highlights

  • While social research acknowledges inconsistencies and contradictions as part of the complexity of human thought and practice, ambivalence is rarely the center of attention in the social sciences

  • I analyze the narratives of aging Turkish labor migrants in Vienna and their confrontations with sometimes seemingly irresolvable life decisions

  • By introducing the concept of relational ambivalence in this article, I have shown that ambivalence can neither be seen solely as an individual experience, as residing within the individual, nor as a result of differing social status and roles alone. Rather it is a product of relationships individuals engage in. This means that relational ambivalence can be marked by ambivalences stemming from gender structures

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Summary

Introduction

While social research acknowledges inconsistencies and contradictions as part of the complexity of human thought and practice, ambivalence is rarely the center of attention in the social sciences. Keywords Aging, ambivalence, Austria, belonging, home, labor migration, older migrants, relational ambivalence, Turkey, Vienna

Results
Conclusion

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