强加的隐形:波兰父母在德国养育的人通过协商类别解开身份之谜

IF 2.3 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Ewa Cichocka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然近期的研究广泛关注在有关移民和难民的研究中对类别和方法的反思性使用,但却较少关注其父母为移民的个人。以往的研究指出,第二代移民和移民后裔这两个术语以移民为中心,从而使他们的经历同质化,并加深了对他们所定义的人群的社会排斥。然而,我们对研究参与者对这些类别的看法了解较少。此外,大多数研究的重点都是非白人移民后裔,这就有可能使科学话语与主流叙事相一致,使一些群体成为问题,而另一些群体则保持沉默。本文通过研究在德国由波兰父母抚养长大的人对研究类别的看法,弥补了这一空白。文章介绍了受访者在其作为隐形少数群体的地位以及获得各种阶级资源的背景下对研究类别的看法。本研究通过自传体叙事访谈,首先展示了受访者如何通过与主流社会及其家庭的日常互动,在微观层面上将自己定位为隐形人。然后,研究揭示了这一过程的机制:赋予身份、创造反移民环境、施加融入压力以及限制资源。研究认为,隐匿性限制了对话者协商归属感和表达自我认同的可能性。让参与者参与类别协商和自传式叙事访谈,同时考虑阶级视角,可以扩大反思身份认同的空间,并有助于使类别与参与者的生活经历相一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Imposed Invisibility: Unraveling Identities Through Negotiations of Categories among People Raised in Germany by Polish Parents
While recent studies have focused extensively on the reflexive use of categories and methodologies in research on migrants and refugees, they have paid less attention to individuals whose parents are migrants. Previous studies have noted that the terms second generation migrants and migrant descendants are centered on migration, thereby homogenizing experiences and deepening social exclusion of the people they define. However, we have less understanding of research participants’ perceptions of these categories. Additionally, the focus of most research has been on non-white descendants of migrants, which risks aligning scientific discourse with mainstream narratives that problematize some groups while silencing others. This article bridges this gap by examining the perception of research categories among people raised in Germany by Polish parents. It presents interviewees’ negotiations of categories in the context of their status as an invisible minority as well as their access to various class resources. Drawing from autobiographical narrative interviews, the study first demonstrates how the positioning of interlocutors as invisible begins at the micro level through everyday interactions with the mainstream society and their families. It then reveals the mechanisms of this process: ascribing identifications, creating an anti-migrant environment, exerting pressure on integration, and limiting resources. It argues that invisibility limits interlocutors’ possibilities to negotiate a sense of belonging and express self-identification. Engaging participants in category negotiations and autobiographical narrative interviews, along with considering the class perspective, expands the space for reflecting on identity and helps to align categories with participants’ lived experiences.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: International Migration Review is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal created to encourage and facilitate the study of all aspects of sociodemographic, historical, economic, political, legislative and international migration. It is internationally regarded as the principal journal in the field facilitating study of international migration, ethnic group relations, and refugee movements. Through an interdisciplinary approach and from an international perspective, IMR provides the single most comprehensive forum devoted exclusively to the analysis and review of international population movements.
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