How Chinese Are You?: Adopted Chinese Youth and their Families Negotiate Identity and Culture

How Chinese Are You?: Adopted Chinese Youth and their Families Negotiate Identity and Culture

by Andrea Louie
How Chinese Are You?: Adopted Chinese Youth and their Families Negotiate Identity and Culture

How Chinese Are You?: Adopted Chinese Youth and their Families Negotiate Identity and Culture

by Andrea Louie

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Overview

Chinese adoption is often viewed as creating new possibilities for the formation of multicultural, cosmopolitan families. For white adoptive families, it is an opportunity to learn more about China and Chinese culture, as many adoptive families today try to honor what they view as their children’s “birth culture.” However, transnational, transracial adoption also presents challenges to families who are trying to impart in their children cultural and racial identities that they themselves do not possess, while at the same time incorporating their own racial, ethnic, and religious identities. Many of their ideas are based on assumptions about how authentic Chinese and Chinese Americans practice Chinese culture.

Based on a comparative ethnographic study of white and Asian American adoptive parents over an eight year period, How Chinese Are You? explores how white adoptive parents, adoption professionals, Chinese American adoptive parents, and teens adopted from China as children negotiate meanings of Chinese identity in the context of race, culture, and family. Viewing Chineseness as something produced, rather than inherited, Andrea Louie examines how the idea of “ethnic options” differs for Asian American versus white adoptive parents as they produce Chinese adoptee identities, while re-working their own ethnic, racial, and parental identities. Considering the broader context of Asian American cultural production, Louie analyzes how both white and Asian American adoptive parents engage in changing understandings of and relationships with “Chineseness” as a form of ethnic identity, racial identity, or cultural capital over the life course. Louie also demonstrates how constructions of Chinese culture and racial identity dynamically play out between parents and their children, and for Chinese adoptee teenagers themselves as they “come of age.” How Chinese Are You? is an engaging and original study of the fluidity of race, ethnicity, and cultural identity in modern America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781479834297
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/07/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 646 KB

About the Author

Andrea Louie is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at Michigan State University, where she is also affiliated with the Asian Pacific American Studies Program. She is author of Chineseness Across Borders: Renegotiating Chinese Identities in China and the United States.

Table of Contents



Contents 

Acknowledgments ix 

1. Introduction 1 

2. A Background on Transnational and Transracial Adoption 39 

3. Beginnings: The Adoption Trip 61 

4. Asian American Adoptive Parents: Freedom and Flexibility 88 

5. White Parents’ Constructions of Chineseness: Preemptive Parenting 139 

6. Negotiating Chineseness in Everyday Life 185 

7. Don’t Objectify Me: Chinese Adoptee Teens 226 

8. Conclusion 259 

Notes 271 

References 277 

Index 285 

About the Author 291 

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