Narrative Inquiry
Volume 20, Issue 1, 2010, Pages 82-105

Ethnic categorization and moral agency in 'ftting in' narratives among Madrid immigrant students (Article)

Pastor A.M.R.
  • a Department of Modern Philology, University of Castilla-la Mancha, Avenida Camilo José Cela s/n, 13001 Ciudad Real, Spain

Abstract

Tis article examines a group of 'ftting in' narratives told by students with different migrant backgrounds in focus group interviews. These narratives indicate shared experiences of adaptation and transformation among these students in Madrid's multilingual/multicultural schools and Spanish society. I argue that these narratives were told in interaction and constrained by the moderators' development of the topic-talk at hand, emerging only as answers to questions related to personal experiences of social exclusion in and outside school, as well as those related to group relations at school. They presented a pervasive use of ethnic categorization, which is analyzed in relation to narrators, the problematic event, and the moral order displayed in these narratives. As an interactional device, ethnic categorization served different purposes: (1) to index intragroup solidarity ('we' versus 'other'); (2) to signal opposition and comparison among students with different migrant backgrounds ('them' versus 'them' or 'them' versus 'us'); (3) to attribute different degrees of moral agency to narrative protagonists. All in all, these narratives display the moral order of school integration and open a window of understanding to the challenges faced by immigrant origin students in Spanish society. © John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Author Keywords

Immigrant students Social exclusion focus groups Ethnic categorization Moral agency

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-77956416471&doi=10.1075%2fni.20.1.05rel&partnerID=40&md5=289cf4b03c4df962e1d13b5b78ff82c1

DOI: 10.1075/ni.20.1.05rel
ISSN: 13876740
Cited by: 13
Original Language: English