Publication | Closed Access
Becoming a Transracial Family: Communicatively Negotiating Divergent Identities in Families Formed Through Transracial Adoption
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
EthnicityTransracial AdoptionEducationSocial SciencesDivergent IdentitiesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Family StudiesRaceCultural IdentityAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityEthnic StudiesDiscourse Dependence TheorizingIdentity IssueFamily RelationshipsFamily DiversitySocial IdentityTransracial Adoptive FamiliesTransracial FamilyIntersectionalityIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Interracial RelationshipCultureCultural DifferencesSociology
Guided by intergroup and discourse dependence theorizing, the present study explored how divergent identities are communicatively negotiated in transracial adoptive families. Specifically, we examined how adoptive parents’ understandings of their child’s race and culture changed after adopting transracially and how adoptive parents navigated racial and cultural differences through talk. Results from 21 interviews revealed that adoptive parents reported an increased awareness of race and culture, such that a new appreciation for their child’s race and culture developed yet simultaneously amplified ambivalence. Results further indicated parents utilized narrating, naming, ritualizing, discussing, normalizing, and praising to communicatively negotiate racial and cultural identity differences. Findings contribute to transracial adoptive family research by illuminating how parents make sense of differing social identities within the family. Results also advance discourse-dependence theorizing by demonstrating the context-specific nature of internal boundary management strategies and by giving voice to the prevalence of border work in transracial adoptive families.
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