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The adaptation and integration of the mainstream and ethnic culture are important processes to understand as they have been associated with immigrant and minority youth's adjustment and family dynamics. However, few studies focusing on youth's cultural experiences have explored youth's active role in their own cultural development, and even less

The adaptation and integration of the mainstream and ethnic culture are important processes to understand as they have been associated with immigrant and minority youth's adjustment and family dynamics. However, few studies focusing on youth's cultural experiences have explored youth's active role in their own cultural development, and even less have explored youth's role in influencing parents' cultural development. In the current dissertation, two studies addressed these issues by using a within-family longitudinal design to explore 246 Mexican American youth's role in their own and their families' cultural development. The first study examined the reciprocal associations in parents' and two offspring's cultural values to examine developmental differences in parent-youth socialization processes. Overall, the importance of mothers' values was highlighted as a significant predictor of increases in youths' values, five years later. In addition, Study 1 highlighted situations where youth play an active role in their parents' cultural development as youths' lower endorsement of respect for elders values was associated with increases in fathers' value endorsement, five years later. The second study explored the associations between youth's imitation and de-identification from parents and parent-youth incongruence in Mexican and Anglo cultural orientations. Youths' active role in their cultural development was underscored, as youths' reports of de-identifying from parents were linked to more incongruence in parent-youth Anglo orientations. Further, important family characteristics (i.e., parent-youth warmth and demographic similarities) were shown to predict youths' more imitation and less de-identification from parents.
ContributorsPerez-Brena, Norma J. (Author) / Updegraff, Kimberly A (Thesis advisor) / Umaña-Taylor, Adriana J. (Committee member) / Dumka, Larry E (Committee member) / Glick, Jennifer E. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
Description

Excavating Self was created between January and April 2023 and is comprised of two series and other additional works. It starts and ends with a set of self portraits that reflect on the experience before and after creating this body of work. The first series, On Sacrifice, draws on experiences

Excavating Self was created between January and April 2023 and is comprised of two series and other additional works. It starts and ends with a set of self portraits that reflect on the experience before and after creating this body of work. The first series, On Sacrifice, draws on experiences from a previous relationship, the feelings surrounding them, and the emotional fallout of the breakup. The second series, Juntos, explores relationships with family, past and current loves, and the way these relationships shape understanding of identity. The remaining pieces focus on topics such as ancestry, gender expression, and sexuality. Other central themes include self discovery, preserving memory, and love in all of its multiple truths. All pieces were created using intaglio printmaking techniques with hand written text.

ContributorsSoza, Bronson (Author) / Hood, Mary (Thesis director) / Cabrera, Margarita (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Public Affairs (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / School of Art (Contributor)
Created2023-05
Description
Family Means Resilience (FMR) is a comprehensive proposal for an interactive museum exhibit that demonstrates the many faces of familial strength across space and time in North America. The exhibit proposal transports visitors into the stories of four families striving to overcome the challenges of their environments. Visitors will find

Family Means Resilience (FMR) is a comprehensive proposal for an interactive museum exhibit that demonstrates the many faces of familial strength across space and time in North America. The exhibit proposal transports visitors into the stories of four families striving to overcome the challenges of their environments. Visitors will find themselves welcomed into historically-accurate homes of the following families: An Inuit family weathers a harsh winter on Igloolik Island, c. 1830's. A Hohokam family battles severe drought and heat at Pueblo Grande, c. 1000 CE. A nuclear family in suburban Wisconsin copes with fears of the Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962. A black family struggles for equality during the Harlem Renaissance, c. 1920's. These four stories are woven together in a handmade 1:36 scale diorama that models the layout of FMR. The proposal is complete with descriptions of interactive elements such as immersive soundscapes, climate effects, and children-oriented activities designed to engage visiting families. Family Means Resilience is an opportunity for families to better understand those who came before them and to better appreciate the impact they have on their own relatives.
ContributorsCaito, Caroline (Author) / Decker, Ted (Thesis director) / Bustamante, Denise (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / School of Art (Contributor)
Created2024-05
ContributorsCaito, Caroline (Author) / Decker, Ted (Thesis director) / Bustamante, Denise (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / School of Art (Contributor)
Created2024-05
ContributorsCaito, Caroline (Author) / Decker, Ted (Thesis director) / Bustamante, Denise (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / School of Art (Contributor)
Created2024-05
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Description
With Each Passing Day is a thesis exhibition presented in Northlight Archive in Tempe, AZ, accompanied by a photographic book. This work investigates me and my changing relationship with my mother as I grow into a young woman and slowly finding more of her qualities within myself as each day

With Each Passing Day is a thesis exhibition presented in Northlight Archive in Tempe, AZ, accompanied by a photographic book. This work investigates me and my changing relationship with my mother as I grow into a young woman and slowly finding more of her qualities within myself as each day passes. This thesis project explores the process of growth, finding independence, and understanding acceptance and control.
ContributorsDahlstrom, Tyler (Author) / Anand, Julie (Thesis director) / Klett, Mark (Committee member) / School of Art (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05