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Transmigrant identities and attitudes: the case of a Pangasinan-American family

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-09, 16:30 authored by Sheryl Bernardo-Hinesley, Alba Arias Álvarez
Identity plays a crucial role in determining whether diasporic minority communities either integrate into the host country or resist acculturation and assimilation. Since identity is performed and negotiated through discourse, the study of connections between identity and language practices of migrant groups is crucial in understanding how language is used to express their multilayered identities. Using sociolinguistic interviews as the primary data source, this research analyzes how three generations of a Pangasinan-American family negotiate their complex identities and express their attitudes towards English, Filipino, and Pangasinan. Findings show that their Pangasinan-American identity is performed through translingual practices, which enable the portrayal of their membership to their home community and their integration into the host society. Each participant situates their Pangasinan identity in relation to their other identities - Filipino and American - which emerge in the diasporic context. This study contributes to the research on the role of language in the development of community membership and allegiances of bi-/multilingual transmigrants.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Accepted version

Journal

Journal of World Languages

ISSN

2169-8252

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Issue

3

Volume

10

Page range

668-692

Department affiliated with

  • Sussex Centre for Language Studies Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Staff notes

Item deposited via Symplectic Elements on: 2025-01-08 Item deposited by: Dr Alba Arias Alvarez (A.Arias-Alvarez@sussex.ac.uk) Elements publication ID: 355441