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Original Articles

Discursive Negotiation of Family Identity: A Study of U.S. Families with Adopted Children from China

Pages 126-147 | Published online: 11 Apr 2008
 

Abstract

Research suggests that social interactions may challenge the identity of families with adopted children from China. Yet, both the extent of challenge experienced, and how families negotiate these interactions remains unknown. Thus, this project investigates the degree to which questions or comments from others either support or challenge family identity, as well as the degree to which response strategies used by parents either support or challenge family identity. A volunteer national sample of 245 parents with adopted children from China completed a survey with both closed- and open-ended questions. This study found that the majority of comments and questions were experienced as challenging. Simultaneously, language functioned as a resource for parents to respond in ways that validated the family as a construct and the relations between members as familial.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author would like to thank Todd C. Trautman, Brandon D. Stow, Chelsea A. H. Stow, and Robert L. Ballard for their research assistance, Mary Claire Morr Serewicz for her insightful feedback, and the parents who participated for sharing their experiences.

Notes

Falvey, L. D. (2004). Dead swans, ladybugs, and red threads: Normative behavior on Chinese adoptive parent listservs. Unpublished dissertation. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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