Barlow K M, Taylor D M, Lambert W E
Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
J Psychol. 2000 Nov;134(6):581-600. doi: 10.1080/00223980009598238.
Ethnic group acculturation remains a concern in the United States today. In the present study, the authors explored the extent to which members of three ethnic groups (White American women, African American women, and Cuban American women) perceived themselves to be "American," how much each group felt that its members were perceived as being American by White Americans, and how these perceptions related to beliefs about their own group's economic and social status. The results showed that African Americans felt American but felt that they were not perceived as such by White Americans. African Americans also reported feeling economically and socially excluded. In contrast, Cuban Americans reported neither feeling they were American nor believing they were perceived as such by White Americans, but feelings of inclusion increased with length of residence. Implications of these results for the common ingroup identity model are discussed.
种族群体的文化适应在当今美国仍是一个受关注的问题。在本研究中,作者探讨了三个种族群体(美国白人女性、非裔美国女性和古巴裔美国女性)的成员认为自己是“美国人”的程度,每个群体感觉其成员被美国白人视为美国人的程度,以及这些认知如何与她们对自己群体经济和社会地位的信念相关。结果显示,非裔美国人觉得自己是美国人,但感觉美国白人并不这么认为。非裔美国人还表示感到在经济和社会上受到排斥。相比之下,古巴裔美国人既不觉得自己是美国人,也不认为美国白人视他们为美国人,但随着居住时间的延长,融入感有所增强。本文讨论了这些结果对共同内群体身份模型的启示。