TY - JOUR
T1 - A narrative inquiry of cross-cultural lives
T2 - Lives in Canada
AU - He, Ming Fang
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - In a series of three papers, I examined the identity-development of three Chinese women teachers as they moved back and forth between Eastern and Western cultures and languages amid the rapidly changing events of the last four decades. I use a river metaphor to explore three phases in the cross-cultural lives of these women: in the first paper, their lives in China amid multiple cultural movements; in the second, their lives in Canada; and in the third their lives in the North American academy. This life-based narrative inquiry, situated between non-fiction, fiction and academic discourses, opens up possibilities for establishing a link between cross-cultural lives and identities, cross-cultural teacher education, and curriculum studies in multicultural contexts. In this second paper, I explore the three teachers' lives in Canada with a particular focus on their enculturation (acquisition of first culture) and acculturation (learning of second or additional culture) processes. Special attention is paid to developing an understanding of the relationship between the cultural impact of a move to Canada and the experience of moving back and forth between China and Canada, a cultural process no less of an upheaval than the Cultural Revolution. I question static notions of first culture, second culture and cultural transformation, and search for a fluid way of thinking and writing about the complex cross-cultural lives and cross-cultural identities.
AB - In a series of three papers, I examined the identity-development of three Chinese women teachers as they moved back and forth between Eastern and Western cultures and languages amid the rapidly changing events of the last four decades. I use a river metaphor to explore three phases in the cross-cultural lives of these women: in the first paper, their lives in China amid multiple cultural movements; in the second, their lives in Canada; and in the third their lives in the North American academy. This life-based narrative inquiry, situated between non-fiction, fiction and academic discourses, opens up possibilities for establishing a link between cross-cultural lives and identities, cross-cultural teacher education, and curriculum studies in multicultural contexts. In this second paper, I explore the three teachers' lives in Canada with a particular focus on their enculturation (acquisition of first culture) and acculturation (learning of second or additional culture) processes. Special attention is paid to developing an understanding of the relationship between the cultural impact of a move to Canada and the experience of moving back and forth between China and Canada, a cultural process no less of an upheaval than the Cultural Revolution. I question static notions of first culture, second culture and cultural transformation, and search for a fluid way of thinking and writing about the complex cross-cultural lives and cross-cultural identities.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=3042540435&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00220270110108178
DO - 10.1080/00220270110108178
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:3042540435
SN - 0022-0272
VL - 34
SP - 323
EP - 342
JO - Journal of Curriculum Studies
JF - Journal of Curriculum Studies
IS - 3
ER -