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Based on the premise that masculinity is constructed within geographically and historically
located social spaces, this chapter draws on forty biographical interviews with Mozambican
men carried out between 2005 to 2014. Focussing on the life stories of Mozambican men who
migrated to South Africa from the 1960s onwards, the chapter seeks to contribute to
expanding the theoretical and methodological conversations about the spatial dynamics of
migrant masculinities. It explores the interconnectedness of masculinity, migration,
colonialism, capitalism and socio-economic inequality in Southern Africa. The chapter
borrows and expands David Harvey’s notion of spatial fix to highlight the spatial dimension
of migrant masculinities and suggested that there is a particular spatial management of masculinities. While the masculinity-fix is produced by the racial and gendered dynamics of
transnational capitalism, it also associates masculinity with geographically and historically
situated spaces, where men engage with their trajectories and perform their subjectivities.
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Author's version of: Aboim, S. (2023). Migration trajectories in Southern Africa: The masculinity fix between Maputo and Johannesburg. In Garth Stahl, Yang Zhao (Eds.), Migratory Men: Place, Transnationalism and Masculinities. Routledge
