“Like Being in Purgatory”: Cultural Identity Mapping Centers Hmong American Experiences of Biculturalism

Author:

McKenzie Jessica1ORCID,Virani Shazana1,Thao Meng1,Lopez Cindy Thai1ORCID,Ford Shelby1,Dionicio Nancy1

Affiliation:

1. California State University, Fresno, USA

Abstract

This study examines what it means to be bicultural to Hmong American emerging adults living in central California. Twenty-four participants ( Mage = 21.92 years) constructed a cultural identity map that portrayed what it means to them to be “Hmong American,” described both their cultural identity map content and their process of constructing it, and completed the Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM). Grounded theory analysis of cultural identity maps and accompanying conversations reveals the pervasiveness of bifurcated biculturalism, or the experience of having split selves. For participants in this study, perceived cultural incompatibility between Hmong and American cultures rendered it necessary to possess two (and sometimes more) distinct cultural identities, and required—for some, almost constant—frame-switching to manage these identities. This article offers an in-depth portrait of three illustrative cases, which represent diversity in terms of gender, social class, and MEIM score. Altogether, findings contribute to scientific understanding of the complex and contradictory nature of biculturalism for Hmong American emerging adults, and speak to the link between ethnic stereotypes and bicultural identity development. Methodologically, this study highlights the utility of identity mapping to examine psychological experiences of biculturalism and other aspects of identity about which people may have hidden, complex, and potentially contradictory stances.

Funder

Department of Child & Family Science at California State University, Fresno

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference73 articles.

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2. Emerging adulthood: A theory of development from the late teens through the twenties.

3. Bicultural Identity Integration (BII): Components and Psychosocial Antecedents

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