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Articles

Identity Construction as a Mother: A Comparative Study Between Adopted and Nonadopted Women

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Pages 184-196 | Received 28 Oct 2013, Accepted 12 Aug 2015, Published online: 16 Oct 2015
 

Abstract

From a constructivist perspective we studied the experience of motherhood in a comparative study with 15 adopted women and 15 nonadopted women, all of them also biological mothers. We used the social self grid, and it was analyzed by means of the program RECORD 5.0 and also through content analysis. Results show similarities and differences between the two groups in the construction of identity as a mother. Although in both samples the self as a mother is constructed similarly to the self in their couple relationship, this is more evident in the case of adoptive daughters, and the difference is statistically significant. The meanings attributed to their own motherhood are similar in both samples and have to do with enjoying motherhood. Nonetheless, in the adoptive sample there are more constructs related to control and doing things right, and in the biological sample there are more constructs referring to naturalness and devotion. Moreover, in the adoptive sample there appears a higher presence of cognitive conflicts and lower self-esteem, and both results tend to significance.

Notes

1Note that in the case of adoptees, when we refer to their mothers/fathers (i.e., “me as a mother's daughter,” “me as a father's daughter”) we are referring to adoptive mothers/fathers, not to biological ones.

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