The coordinated management of a culturally diffused identity: Internationally adopted people and the narrative emplotment of self
by Leinaweaver, Jeff, Ph.D., FIELDING GRADUATE UNIVERSITY, 2008, 248 pages; 3352402

Abstract:

Internationally adopted persons confront multiple challenges in constructing their identities. This study of the narrative emplotment of self looks at and interprets the dynamic process in which internationally adopted people develop, coordinate and manage their sense of self, identity and cultural/racial personhood. Drawing on the theory of the Coordinated Management of Meaning (CMM), the study focuses on their use of orphaning and adoption (origin) stories to most skillfully position and tell one's origin story in concert with one's internal sense of self, and the pressures and forces found in interpersonal and intercultural dialogue. The research reveal how internationally adopted people develop and demonstrate varying levels of game mastery in managing societal scripts and oppressive frames of stigma. Through this game mastery, the research bring to view how the participants have reflexively learned to claim ownership of their stories and develop a sense of agency while fashioning self-empowering narratives out of the resources of their personal root journeys to better manage, frame and coordinate the meaning of their stories across cultural and interpersonal boundaries.

 
AdviserBarnett Pearce
SchoolFIELDING GRADUATE UNIVERSITY
SourceDAI/A 70-04, p. , May 2009
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsSocial psychology; Ethnic studies; Rhetoric
Publication Number3352402
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