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Bound by Blackness: African Migration, Black Identity, and Linked Fate in Post-Civil Rights America.

机译:受黑人束缚:非洲移民,黑人身份和后民权美国的命运。

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摘要

This dissertation explores the identity formation of Ethiopian and Nigerian immigrants, their second generation children, and native born African Americans who reside in the Seattle metropolitan area. Using boundary formation theory, I argue that African immigrants and their second generation children are developing a shared sense of Black identity and racial solidarity (linked fate) with native born African Americans. This shared Black identity is illustrated through both Africans and African Americans' recognition of one another as racial group members, the constraints on their Black identities, and their navigation of similar institutional and political contexts. I argue that this is highly suggestive of an expansion of the Black racial boundary, and the reconstitution of Black identity in the post-Civil Rights Era.;Despite some boundary contraction within the Black racial category by some 1st generation Africans, the African 1.5 and second generation are engaging in boundary crossing particularly with African Americans through their bicultural identities. This process appears to be leading to the blurring of boundaries between the children of African immigrants and native born African Americans, especially through the 1.5 and second generations involvement and integration into African American social and professional organizations. Evidence presented in this dissertation suggests that there is a weakening of ethnic identity among the African 1.5 and second generation. This weakening of ethnic identity among the children of Ethiopians and Nigerians suggest subsequent generations of Africans born here in the United States will eventually be absorbed into an undifferentiated African American/Black category.
机译:本文探讨了埃塞俄比亚和尼日利亚移民,其第二代子女以及居住在西雅图市区的非裔美国人的身份形成。使用边界形成理论,我认为非洲移民和他们的第二代子女正在与出生于美国的非洲裔美国人发展出黑人意识和种族团结感(联系在一起的命运)。非洲人和非裔美国人相互承认自己是种族团体成员,他们的黑人身份受到限制以及他们在类似的制度和政治背景下的航行,都说明了这种共有的黑人身份。我认为这在很大程度上暗示了黑人种族边界的扩大,以及后民权时代黑人身份的重建。尽管第一代非洲人,非洲人1.5和非洲人在黑人种族范畴内有所收缩。第二代人正在通过他们的双重文化身份与非裔美国人进行跨界活动。这个过程似乎正在导致非洲移民的子女与本地出生的非裔美国人之间的界限模糊,特别是通过1.5和第二代人的参与以及融入非裔美国人的社会和专业组织。本文提出的证据表明,非洲1.5代和第二代人的种族认同感有所减弱。埃塞俄比亚人和尼日利亚人孩子之间种族认同的减弱表明,在美国这里出生的非洲人的后代最终将被吸收到未分化的非裔美国人/黑人类别中。

著录项

  • 作者单位

    University of Oregon.;

  • 授予单位 University of Oregon.;
  • 学科 Sociology.;African American studies.;Black studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 222 p.
  • 总页数 222
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:54:17

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