Hugh Morrison
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Parental narratives
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This chapter examines the first overlapping narrative lens – that of missionary parents. It argues that parental narratives, focused primarily on the family and domestic issues, should be the starting point. The family provided the primary parameters for children’s lives and was the reference point by which children often interpreted their own experiences and memories. It focuses on the narratives around missionary children that were constructed primarily by parents and in family settings, especially as they emerged through the early decades of the twentieth century. After outlining the changing demographic shape of missionary families, the chapter considers the religious underpinnings of parents’ narratives. It then examines these narratives further, arguing that while domestic details were to the fore, a deeper set of anxieties lay at their core: the maintenance of family life, keeping healthy and attaining a good education for their children. These were emotionally framed and were further bolstered by a religious rationale. As a result, missionary children became caught up in a perpetual set of negotiations over the best places to live, how to stay healthy, and especially where to be educated. Therefore, in parents’ narratives about their children, dislocation and separation emerge as important themes because they caused parents much anxiety. As such missionary parenting, both its realities and its representations, can be conceptualised as a particular form of emotional labour.

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