Counselling Psychology Quarterly
Volume 18, Issue 2, 2005, Pages 109-119

Loss and mourning in immigration: Using the assimilation model to assess continuing bonds with native culture (Conference Paper)

Henry H.M.* , Stiles W.B. , Biran M.W.
  • a Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States, Department of Psychology, Miami University, 136 Benton Hall, Oxford, OH 45056, United States
  • b Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States
  • c Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States

Abstract

This study examined the process of loss and mourning associated with immigration. Three broadcast interviews from Al-Jazeera network, an Arabic satellite channel, revealed different responses of Arab immigrants to losing their native culture. Theoretically, clinging to the lost culture may lead to isolation and ethnocentric withdrawal. A healthier response to loss is to mourn it. According to the Continuing Bonds model of mourning, immigrants incorporate elements of their native culture such as their families, friends, identity, language, values and traditions, into their new life structure. Instead of abandoning their emotional attachments to these cultural elements, immigrants may use them as resources that may help them adjust to their new countries and solve many problems they may face. The Assimilation Model, which has been used to assess psychotherapeutic progress, provides a language for describing a sequence through which elements of lost culture are assimilated into the immigrant's new life structure. This study revealed that a continuing bond with the lost culture is a part of the full assimilation and mourning of this culture. © 2005 Taylor & Francis Group Ltd.

Author Keywords

Assimilation model Continuing bonds Immigration Mourning Acculturation Loss

Index Keywords

assimilation model cultural anthropology human psychotherapy Arab mourning language Conference Paper identity theoretical model emotional attachment immigration friend family

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-21744434798&doi=10.1080%2f09515070500136819&partnerID=40&md5=181d84ada4f80a46b404ce74d6714b21

DOI: 10.1080/09515070500136819
ISSN: 09515070
Cited by: 22
Original Language: English