Ethnic Identity: The Case of Filipino-Japanese Children in Japan
Asia-Pacific Social Science Review
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Title |
Ethnic Identity: The Case of Filipino-Japanese Children in Japan
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Creator |
Almonte-Acosta, Sherlyne A; De La Salle University
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Subject |
Social Science
Ethnicity, Filipino-Japanese Children, immigrants, ethnic identity, assimilation, and integration |
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Description |
This study tries to understand the characteristics and context of ethnic identity among 30 Filipino- Japanese children, 8-16 years of age, living in Oyama-Shi, Tokyo, and Hiroshima Prefecture. It has identified three interlocking patterns of ethnic identification among Filipino-Japanese children: ethnic preference, the colonizing lens of the majority, and the interiorized ethnic clash/struggle. The ethnic preference pattern refers to the range of perspectives that propel preference, which may include stereotyped images, inferiority, superiority or equality of the majority and minority ethnic groups. The colonizing lens of the majority, the other directed ethnic identification pattern, refers to how Filipino-Japanese children use dominant society's standards in characterizing and judging the members of minority group. The interiorized ethnic clash/ struggle pattern refers to the Filipino-Japanese children's wrestling with their feelings and reactions towards a member of a majority group who emphasized on their difference or inferiority. Keywords: Ethnicity, Filipino-Japanese Children, immigrants, ethnic identity, assimilation, and integration
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Publisher |
De La Salle University
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Contributor |
—
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Date |
2009-01-12
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Type |
Peer-reviewed Article
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Format |
application/pdf
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Identifier |
http://www.philjol.info/philjol/index.php/APSSR/article/view/781
10.3860/apssr.v8i2.781 |
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Source |
Asia-Pacific Social Science Review; Vol 8, No 2 (2008); 17-33
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Language |
en
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Coverage |
Philippines; Japan
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