Nagata Donna K, Cheng Wendy J Y
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-1109, USA.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 2003 Jul;73(3):266-78. doi: 10.1037/0002-9432.73.3.266.
The present study investigated the intergenerational communications between Japanese Americans who were unjustly ordered into U.S. concentration camps during World War II and their offspring born after the war. Survey data were collected from 450 2nd-generation (Nisei) Japanese American former internees to assess patterns of communication with their children about the internment. The study and its results are discussed in relation to racial socialization and the influence of ethnicity on reactions to traumatic stress.
本研究调查了二战期间被不公正地关进美国集中营的日裔美国人与其战后出生的后代之间的代际交流。从450名第二代(二代日裔)日裔美国前被拘留者那里收集了调查数据,以评估他们与子女就被拘留事件的交流模式。结合种族社会化以及种族对创伤性应激反应的影响对该研究及其结果进行了讨论。