The Say Wallahi Generation: A Narrative Study of Bicultural Identity for Somali American Emerging Adults

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Roun Said, Tabitha Grier-Reed
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This qualitative study used narrative inquiry to examine how five Midwestern Somali American emerging adults negotiated their Somali culture and their American culture into a coherent sense of self. Participants were primarily women (n = 4) and students (three undergraduate and one graduate). Merging or hybridizing cultural identities was one way participants found integration. Shifting or alternating identities was another. In general, dominant and conflicting cultural narratives presented challenges to integration and connected to themes of acculturative dissonance, exclusion, and contested American identity. Yet, robust competing narratives were transformative, undergirding the themes of Integrated and Owning It and Shifting Identities. Unlike conflicting narratives which existed in negative tension with dominant narratives, competing narratives existed in positive tension and provided a basis for frame-switching which empowered participants to shift identities with ease even as they contended with multiple master narratives.
Say Wallahi一代:索马里裔美国新兴成年人双文化身份的叙事研究
本定性研究采用叙事探究的方法,考察了五个中西部索马里裔美国人的新成人是如何将他们的索马里文化和美国文化协调成一个连贯的自我意识的。参与者主要是女性(n = 4)和学生(3名本科生和1名研究生)。融合或混合文化身份是参与者发现融合的一种方式。变换或交替身份是另一种。总的来说,主导和冲突的文化叙事对融合提出了挑战,并与文化失调、排斥和有争议的美国身份等主题联系在一起。然而,强有力的竞争叙事是变革性的,巩固了“整合和拥有它”和“身份转换”的主题。与存在于主导叙事的消极张力中的冲突叙事不同,竞争叙事存在于积极张力中,并为框架切换提供了基础,使参与者能够轻松转换身份,即使他们与多个主叙事竞争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Emerging Adulthood
Emerging Adulthood Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
19.20%
发文量
87
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