Mothers Raising Daughters: New Complexities in Cultural Socialization for Children Adopted From China |
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Authors: | Neda Bebiroglu Ellen E Pinderhughes |
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Institution: | Tufts University , Medford , Massachusetts , USA |
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Abstract: | This study examined the process of cultural socialization among 6- to 8-year-old girls adopted from China, with a focus on adoptive mothers’ decisions about their children's socialization and children's interest in and knowledge about China and being Chinese. Qualitative interviews of 10 mothers and their children were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Three main categories were identified to further specify parental cultural socialization: (1) motivation, (2) approaches to differences, and (3) type of activities that differed in their contextual layers and their degree of structure. Findings additionally revealed the interplay between parents’ cultural socialization practices and children's interest in socialization, patterns of participation, and knowledge and understanding about China or being Chinese. Results suggest that parental cultural socialization in families with children adopted internationally and transracially is more dynamic, complex, and layered than previously thought. |
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Keywords: | international adoption transracial adoption adoption concerns cultural socialization parenthood |
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