Adolescence
Volume 28, Issue 109, 1993, Pages 173-184

Identity choices in immigrant adolescent females. (Article)

Goodenow C.* , Espin O.M.
  • a Women's Studies Department, San Diego State University.
  • b Women's Studies Department, San Diego State University.

Abstract

The adolescent task of ego identity formation is especially complex when it must be carried out in the context of a new country and culture. For immigrant adolescents, whose numbers have grown rapidly in the American school population in the past decade, developing a firm identity involves steering a course between refusing to adapt to American life at all and acculturating too rapidly. Based on semi-structured interviews with five adolescent females, all recent immigrants from Latin America, this paper discusses the active role immigrant adolescents can take in balancing the influences of old and new cultures in the formation of a healthy bicultural identity, and the special problems females face in adapting to a new sex role culture.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

South and Central America Latin America psychological aspect human Mother-Child Relations ethnic group ethnology gender identity Hispanic Americans Adolescent Personality Development Acculturation ego development female Identification (Psychology) ego cultural factor peer group identity Article group psychology Social Environment migration Emigration and Immigration mother child relation

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0027569936&partnerID=40&md5=b4670e66756012924e39da738387c161

ISSN: 00018449
Cited by: 45
Original Language: English