The Immigration of Tradition: A Qualitative Study on Gender Differentiation and Cultural Parenting in West African Immigrant Households

Djemo Fade
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Abstract

In recent years, there has been an influx of West African immigrants into the United States and European countries. By the end of the twentieth century, 1 million African immigrants were living in the United States, of which 50 percent arrived and settled between 1990 and 2000. By 2004, 35% of the total African immigrant population were West African immigrants. As more West Africans migrate away from their native lands, a new challenge arises in adapting to life within a different, less traditional environment—the Western society. This research focuses on the extent to which West African culture and tradition impact the way these immigrant families build their family structure and incorporate their cultural identities into these new environments. I examine the historical construction of gender-differentiated parenting in West African culture and how it has shaped familial, societal, and political structures over time. Through this historical framework, I then analyze the influence of traditional values in West African immigrant households and how they shape the continuation and discontinuation of certain West African practices in the new society. I also examine how these families carry aspects of their culture through their adaptation journey and their cultural parenting practices as a way to keep the West African identity from dying out and as a way to secure stability in Western society. From my research I have found that by leaving certain traditional values of their culture back home, such as certain marriage practices or gendered education, West African immigrants work to find a balance between their native culture and the cultural expectations of Western society. As Western society becomes more progressive and less accepting of traditional gender roles, as depicted in media and entertainment, being true to one's identity conflicts with the ability to "start new" in a foreign community in the face of different societal norms.
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传统移民:西非移民家庭性别差异与文化教养的质性研究
近年来,有大量西非移民涌入美国和欧洲国家。到20世纪末,有100万非洲移民居住在美国,其中50%是在1990年至2000年期间抵达并定居的。到2004年,35%的非洲移民是西非移民。随着越来越多的西非人离开他们的祖国,在适应一个不同的、不那么传统的环境——西方社会——的生活方面出现了新的挑战。本研究的重点是西非文化和传统在多大程度上影响这些移民家庭建立家庭结构的方式,并将他们的文化身份融入这些新环境。我研究了西非文化中性别差异育儿的历史结构,以及它如何随着时间的推移塑造了家庭、社会和政治结构。通过这一历史框架,我分析了西非移民家庭中传统价值观的影响,以及它们如何在新社会中塑造某些西非习俗的延续和终止。我还研究了这些家庭如何通过他们的适应之旅和他们的文化养育实践来携带他们的文化方面,以此来防止西非身份的消亡,并作为一种确保西方社会稳定的方式。从我的研究中,我发现,西非移民把他们文化中的某些传统价值观,如某些婚姻习俗或性别教育,留在家乡,努力在他们的本土文化和西方社会的文化期望之间找到平衡。正如媒体和娱乐所描述的那样,随着西方社会越来越进步,越来越不接受传统的性别角色,在面对不同社会规范的外国社区中,忠于自己的身份与“开始新生活”的能力相冲突。
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