Chapter 7 Flashcards

1
Q

migrants

A
  • those who move from a heritage culture (original culture) to a host culture (new culture)
  • Includes sojourners (those who only intent to stay temporarily) and immigrants (those who intend to stay permanently)
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2
Q

u-shaped curve of acculturation

A
  • People initially go through a honeymoon phase where they’re really happy with the new culture (ie. trying new foods, meeting new people)
  • Eventually, they enter the crisis/culture shock phase where they feel a lot of negative emotions about the culture (ie. feeling hindered by language, feeling homesick)
  • After this, they enter the adjustment phase where they begin to adjust and enjoy their experiences again (ie. improving language, making friends)
  • Happens when people arrive in new cultures, but can also happen when migrants return to their home cultures (“reverse culture shock”)
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3
Q

culture shock

A

Being anxious, helpless, irritable, and homesick when moving to a new culture

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4
Q

What impacts adjustment and acculturation?

A
  • cultural distance
  • cultural fit
  • acculturation strategies
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5
Q

cultural distance

A

the difference between 2 cultures and their ways of life → greater distance, greater adjustment needed → more difficulty acculturating

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6
Q

cultural fit

A

the degree of similarity between one’s personality and the dominant values of the host culture → greater similarity, less adjustment needed → less difficulty acculturating

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7
Q

is acculturation always a good thing?

A

No, sometimes it can be detrimental to adopt a host culture’s values (ie. people gaining weight when they acculturate in the USA)

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8
Q

identity denial

A
  • When a person’s cultural identity is called into question because they don’t appear to match the prototype of that culture (ie. “Where are you from? No, where are you really from?”) → suggests that person doesn’t really belong in the culture
  • When people’s identity is denied, they often engage in identity-affirming practices (doing things that are common in the host culture)
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9
Q

stereotype threat

A
  • the fear that one will accidentally do something to confirm a negative stereotype of their cultural group (ie. African-American taking a difficult test may worry that they’ll do badly and confirm the stereotype that African-Americans are less academically-inclined)
    • When people are primed/reminded of their race, gender, etc. before completing a task, they’re more likely to fulfill that stereotype
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10
Q

blending

A

the tendency for bicultural people to display psychological tendencies between those of their two cultures (ex. Canadians that move to Japan start to display slightly lower self-esteem)

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11
Q

frame-switching

A
  • tendency for bicultural people to switch between different cultural selves (aka: alternation) depending on the cultural context
  • Can be conscious (ex. Switching between languages, African-Americans “code-switching” between the street and ‘the decents’) or unconscious (ex. Switching to thinking in ways more in-line with Chinese culture after being exposed to a cultural prime)
  • Varies based on the degree of bicultural identity integration
  • People who aren’t bicultural can also use cultural knowledge to frame-switch when primed
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12
Q

bicultural identity integration

A
  • extent to which people see their two cultural identities as compatible or in opposition to each other
    • High bicultural identity integration: see them as compatible, integrate them together → should have more frame-switching
    • Low bicultural identity integration: see them as incompatible, must separate them (can’t identify with both simultaneously)
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13
Q

multiculturalism and creativity

A
  • Multicultural people may be more creative → living in other cultures may give you additional perspectives
    • Ex. in the fashion world, designers who had lived in a number of different countries (breadth) for a significant amount of time (depth) that had higher cultural differences (cultural distance) rated more creative
  • Multicultural living fosters a way of thinking called integrative complexity (willingness and ability to acknowledge and consider different viewpoints at the same time)
  • However, it’s also possible that creative people are just more inclined to move to a new culture
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