Ethnic_self-definition_MM-CT_D&S[1].pdf (281.21 kB)
Download fileThe construction of ethnic minority identity: a discursive psychological approach to ethnic self-definition in action
journal contribution
posted on 2011-12-13, 11:04 authored by Maria-Eugenia Merino, Cristian TileagaCristian TileagaThe present article intends to examine how ethnic minority group members account for their
ethnic identity as part of a series of interviews with young Mapuches on what it means to be
Mapuche in contemporary Chilean society. The focus is on the actual accomplishment and display
of ethnic self-definition and group identification. We draw on insights from discursive psychology to
explore some features of common-sense practical reasoning that ethnic minority group members
use to negotiate, self-ascribe or resist a particular sense of identity, and to produce observable and
reportable identities. We have a particular interest in illustrating how ethnic self-definition can be
seen as the contingent outcome of a practical and interpretive issue for members of society, with a
special focus on how ethnic minority identity is constructed through the flexible use of group-defining
attributes and characteristics, categories and common-sense categorial knowledge. We suggest that
understanding the complex significance and meaning of ethnic self-definition for minority group
members is dependent on engaging closely with its occasioned context of production and treating
social identities as a feature of how people describe themselves. It is argued that this view of ethnic
minority self-definition as a practical and interpretive issue and as a discursive product in action can
provide a further contribution to literature of both discursive and intercultural studies of ethnic
identification of minority groups, intercultural and interethnic relations.
History
School
- Social Sciences
Department
- Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies
Citation
MERINO, M., TILEAGA, C., 2011. The construction of ethnic minority identity: a discursive psychological approach to ethnic self-definition in action. Discourse and Society, 22 (1), pp. 86 - 101.Publisher
Sage Publications Ltd. © The Author(s)Version
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publication date
2011Notes
This article was published in the journal, Discourse & Society [Sage Publications © The Author(s)] and the definitive version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957926510382834ISSN
0957-9265Publisher version
Language
- en