The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China

<p>During the past two decades, Canadian parents have been regularly adopting infants from China, and have been facing a confusing dilemma on how to introduce their children’s Chinese heritage and language. The aim of this qualitative study is to uncover the beliefs and attitudes of the adopti...

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Main Authors: Fang Bian, Dongyan Blachford, Douglas Durst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Stavanger 2015-12-01
Series:Journal of Comparative Social Work
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.uia.no/index.php/JCSW/article/view/345
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spelling doaj-4aeaf51c4bad4bd0bb0efa142b519a232020-11-25T02:31:38ZengUniversity of StavangerJournal of Comparative Social Work0809-99362015-12-01102270The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from ChinaFang BianDongyan BlachfordDouglas Durst<p>During the past two decades, Canadian parents have been regularly adopting infants from China, and have been facing a confusing dilemma on how to introduce their children’s Chinese heritage and language. The aim of this qualitative study is to uncover the beliefs and attitudes of the adopting parents about how to best promote a healthy identify development that includes their Chinese background. Using in-depth interviews, 19 parents of 14 adopted children explored their beliefs about incorporating the Chinese heritage in the development of their girls. The findings reveal that some parents feel that it is best to emphasize Canadian culture - “she is just Canadian.” Some parents feel that it is best to leave it alone and allow the children to choose their “identity” – “she has both feet in both worlds”, whereas, other parents are proactive by introducing Chinese heritage and culture to their children at an early age. Some parents feel that their children created a new identity with the “color purple” – a hybrid and new culture that combines both their Chinese background with a mainstream Canadian lifestyle.</p>http://journal.uia.no/index.php/JCSW/article/view/345inter-country, international adoption, Chinese heritage, parental perspectives
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fang Bian
Dongyan Blachford
Douglas Durst
spellingShingle Fang Bian
Dongyan Blachford
Douglas Durst
The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
Journal of Comparative Social Work
inter-country, international adoption, Chinese heritage, parental perspectives
author_facet Fang Bian
Dongyan Blachford
Douglas Durst
author_sort Fang Bian
title The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
title_short The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
title_full The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
title_fullStr The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
title_full_unstemmed The Color Purple?: Perspectives of Canadian Parents of Adopted Children from China
title_sort color purple?: perspectives of canadian parents of adopted children from china
publisher University of Stavanger
series Journal of Comparative Social Work
issn 0809-9936
publishDate 2015-12-01
description <p>During the past two decades, Canadian parents have been regularly adopting infants from China, and have been facing a confusing dilemma on how to introduce their children’s Chinese heritage and language. The aim of this qualitative study is to uncover the beliefs and attitudes of the adopting parents about how to best promote a healthy identify development that includes their Chinese background. Using in-depth interviews, 19 parents of 14 adopted children explored their beliefs about incorporating the Chinese heritage in the development of their girls. The findings reveal that some parents feel that it is best to emphasize Canadian culture - “she is just Canadian.” Some parents feel that it is best to leave it alone and allow the children to choose their “identity” – “she has both feet in both worlds”, whereas, other parents are proactive by introducing Chinese heritage and culture to their children at an early age. Some parents feel that their children created a new identity with the “color purple” – a hybrid and new culture that combines both their Chinese background with a mainstream Canadian lifestyle.</p>
topic inter-country, international adoption, Chinese heritage, parental perspectives
url http://journal.uia.no/index.php/JCSW/article/view/345
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