1st Edition

Chinese Americans and Their Immigrant Parents Conflict, Identity, and Values

By Terry S Trepper, May Tung Copyright 2000
122 Pages
by Routledge

122 Pages
by Routledge

122 Pages
by Routledge

Based on culture-related themes derived from the author's psychotherapeutic work with young Chinese-American professionals, this important book relates personal problems and conditions to specific sources in Chinese and American cultures and the immigration experience. Unique and practical, this is a nonclinical work that will help Asian Americans connect historical and cultural meanings to their... Read more
Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. What Is in a Name? Culture and Personal Boundary
  • What Is in a Chinese Name?
  • Individual Persons in Chinese Context
  • The Great Wall Mentality: Boundary As Reflected in Dwellings
  • Chapter 2. The Environment for Chinese-American Self-Identity
  • The Process of Self-Identification
  • Chinese-American Self-Identity
  • “E. T. Phone Home”: Roots of the “Self”
  • Chapter 3. “You Have a Chinese What?!”: Internalized Inferiority
  • “Asianness as a Liability”
  • Self-Representation
  • Yes, Even in China
  • Chapter 4. Emotions: Coping Style, Allocation, and Communication
  • Worldviews and Coping Styles
  • Allocation and Communication of Emotions
  • Emotional Awareness for Chinese Americans
  • Chapter 5. Moving Out from the Shadow of the Eclipse: Integration
  • In America
  • In China
  • Chapter 6. Ancestral Ghosts Meet Superman: A New Cycle of Chinese Immigrants
  • References
  • Index  

Biography

Terry S Trepper, May Tung