RT Article T1 Doing Family, Gender, Religion and Raced Identities Across Generations: A Narrative Ethnography on Ismaili Women of Indian East African Heritage JF Journal of Muslim minority affairs VO 41 IS 2 SP 355 OP 374 A1 Trovão, Susana LA English PB Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1767226691 AB Drawing from a narrative ethnography, this paper provides insight into the ways Nizari Ismaili women of Indian East African heritage constructed and performed their mutually-constitutive identities in specific networks of power and hierarchy, and the local knowledges they have produced and passed on to their children. Having lived in Mozambique during the final decades of Portuguese colonialism, the six women interviewed were exposed to contradictory and ambivalent modernizing forces amplified by postcolonial migration processes. The analysis of their biographies and caregiving repertoires involved an intersectional framing to explore the links between identities, boundaries and hierarchy, combined with a multilevel conception of ambivalence addressing the dialectic intersection between the multiple sources of ambivalence in social life. The conclusion highlights how the contradictory structures and ideologies they navigated offered them resources for producing intergenerational transformative outcomes. K1 Migration K1 Intersectionality K1 Ambivalence K1 care-work K1 Identities DO 10.1080/13602004.2021.1947588