TY - JOUR
T1 - Breaking the Mold
T2 - The One Social Class Model and Saving Face among Undocumented and Mixed-Status Chinese Immigrant Families
AU - Liu, Jia Lin
AU - Cherng, Hua Yu Sebastian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. Published by The University of Chicago Press.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Recent studies of immigrant families have called for a reconceptualizing of the influence of social class on education, articulated by the one social class model: White middle-class families possess the cultural capital to foster their social mobility. Fo-cusing on three undocumented and mixed-status Chinese immigrant families in New York City for 3.5 years, we found those who arrived in the United States with the most social class resources fared the worst, whereas those who had less in China were able to persist better. We argue the mechanism underlying this reversal of expected social class patterns is the cultural practice of saving face, which reflects the intersection of social class status, documentation status, and intergenerational ac-culturation. From this article, we demonstrate understandings of social class among immigrants, especially those of precarious legal status, must expand and incorporate social status experiences prior to immigration, notions of belonging in the United States and being undocumented, and changes through acculturation influence practices that can directly affect mobility.
AB - Recent studies of immigrant families have called for a reconceptualizing of the influence of social class on education, articulated by the one social class model: White middle-class families possess the cultural capital to foster their social mobility. Fo-cusing on three undocumented and mixed-status Chinese immigrant families in New York City for 3.5 years, we found those who arrived in the United States with the most social class resources fared the worst, whereas those who had less in China were able to persist better. We argue the mechanism underlying this reversal of expected social class patterns is the cultural practice of saving face, which reflects the intersection of social class status, documentation status, and intergenerational ac-culturation. From this article, we demonstrate understandings of social class among immigrants, especially those of precarious legal status, must expand and incorporate social status experiences prior to immigration, notions of belonging in the United States and being undocumented, and changes through acculturation influence practices that can directly affect mobility.
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U2 - 10.1086/727003
DO - 10.1086/727003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85180483790
SN - 0195-6744
VL - 130
SP - 89
EP - 117
JO - American Journal of Education
JF - American Journal of Education
IS - 1
ER -