“我们不是生活在丛林里”:将非洲作为一个跨国社会空间领域进行调解

S. Schmidt
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摘要

背景/背景:随着非洲大陆移民到美国的人数不断增加,研究人员开始探索非洲移民的跨国身份和网络。关于对移民青年的教育支持是否有区别,以解决非洲移民青年的特殊性,有一小部分文献。目的/目标/研究问题/研究重点:跨国理论假设受试者使用社交网络来连接家乡和海外。他们遇到感知和生活的社会空间,在空间内和空间间导航。本研究的问题是:“来自非洲大陆的青年如何调解纽约的跨国归属感?”研究青年的经验对学校的课程和课外空间具有启示意义,在这些空间中,新来者青年如何定位于离散的群体。人口/参与者/研究对象:研究参与者是来自中非、科特迪瓦、埃塞俄比亚、几内亚、毛里塔尼亚、尼日尔和塞内加尔的19名非洲新青年。大多数年轻人会多种语言,将法语和英语作为第三或第四语言。研究设计:本定性研究借鉴了参与式行动研究和视觉方法。这项研究是与Sankofa俱乐部一起进行的,这是一个每周一次的课后学生领导的俱乐部。在俱乐部里,学生们通过创建关于非洲大陆的网站,并在俱乐部内进行研究,比较他们的家园,分享他们的移民故事,来回应刻板印象。发现/结果:文章将“非洲”呈现为一个由霸权结构产生的中介跨国空间,青年在连接家园时进行调解。研究发现,年轻人纠结于他们作为非洲人的身份。它重新审视了跨国主义,并将非洲定位为一个社会领域,通过这个领域,青年被生产(成为)非洲主体,通过贡献他们自己的符号和经验来纠正他们对这个领域的归属,并利用它来驾驭一个不遵循大陆边界的纽约非洲。结论/建议:教育工作者可以通过在课程和社会实践中将非洲表现为一个生成空间来支持对家乡、非洲和美国的归属感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“We Don’t Live In Jungles”: Mediating Africa as a Transnational Socio-Spatial Field
Background/Context: Amid rising immigration from the African continent to the United States, researchers have begun to explore the transnational identities and networks of African immigrants. There is a small body of literature about whether educational supports for immigrant youth are differentiated to address the particularities of African immigrant youth. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: Transnational theories presume that subjects use social networks to connect home and diaspora. They are encountering both perceived and lived social spaces to navigate belonging in and across space. This study asks, “How do youth from the African continent mediate transnational belonging in NYC?” Studying the experiences of youth has implications for the curricular and extracurricular spaces of schools wherein newcomer youth navigate how to belong in the diaspora. Population/Participants/Subjects: Research participants are 19 newcomer African youth from Centrafrique, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Guinea, Mauritania, Niger, and Senegal. Most of the youth are multilingual and speak French and English as third or fourth languages. Research Design: This qualitative study draws from participatory action research and visual methods. The study was conducted with Sankofa Club, a weekly afterschool student-led club. In the club, students responded to stereotypes by producing websites about the continent and carrying out research within the club to compare their homes and share their migration stories. Findings/Results: The article presents “Africa” as a Mediated Transnational Space, produced by hegemonic structures, that youth mediate as they connect homes. The study finds that youth wrestled with their identification as African. It reexamines transnationalism and positions Africa as a social field through which youth are produced (come to be) as African subjects, redress their belonging to that field by contributing their own symbols and experiences, and use it as they navigate an Africa-in-NYC that does not adhere to continental boundaries. Conclusions/Recommendations: Educators can support the belonging to home, Africa, and the United States by representing Africa as a generative space in curriculum and social practices.
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