TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring Identity in Muslim Moroccan and Pakistani Immigrant Women
AU - Giuliani, Cristina
AU - Tagliabue, Semira
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - This study presents a qualitative investigation of how Muslim Moroccan and Pakistani female immigrants living in Italy conceptualize their
cultural identity. Ten Moroccan and 10 Pakistani (adolescent and adult) women were interviewed through in-depth semi-structured interviews.
The interviewees expressed a strong attachment to their culture of origin: their religion is a crucial aspect of their identity, along with certain
cultural rules and traditional values. At the same time, both Moroccan and Pakistani participants were ambivalent toward and experienced
difficulties in developing a connection to the host country, although the two groups exhibit their lack of connection to their host country in
different ways: Moroccans’ self-representation is marked by a sense of foreignness and by a lack of an emotional connection with places
where they are living while Pakistanis tend to express cultural distance and conflict with the host culture’s values. For both the Moroccan and
Pakistani groups, the challenge of integration and biculturalism seems demanding in the Italian context and is marked by a deep feeling of
emptiness, a lack of an emotional bond with the new country, and a strong cultural ambivalence. Finally, narrative themes are articulated
across four interrelated dimensions (cultural, religious, gendered, spatial), revealing interesting differences based on national origin and
generation.
AB - This study presents a qualitative investigation of how Muslim Moroccan and Pakistani female immigrants living in Italy conceptualize their
cultural identity. Ten Moroccan and 10 Pakistani (adolescent and adult) women were interviewed through in-depth semi-structured interviews.
The interviewees expressed a strong attachment to their culture of origin: their religion is a crucial aspect of their identity, along with certain
cultural rules and traditional values. At the same time, both Moroccan and Pakistani participants were ambivalent toward and experienced
difficulties in developing a connection to the host country, although the two groups exhibit their lack of connection to their host country in
different ways: Moroccans’ self-representation is marked by a sense of foreignness and by a lack of an emotional connection with places
where they are living while Pakistanis tend to express cultural distance and conflict with the host culture’s values. For both the Moroccan and
Pakistani groups, the challenge of integration and biculturalism seems demanding in the Italian context and is marked by a deep feeling of
emptiness, a lack of an emotional bond with the new country, and a strong cultural ambivalence. Finally, narrative themes are articulated
across four interrelated dimensions (cultural, religious, gendered, spatial), revealing interesting differences based on national origin and
generation.
KW - Muslim women
KW - Pakistani and Moroccan immigration
KW - cultural identity
KW - Muslim women
KW - Pakistani and Moroccan immigration
KW - cultural identity
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/66141
U2 - 10.5964/ejop.v11i1.844
DO - 10.5964/ejop.v11i1.844
M3 - Article
SN - 1841-0413
VL - 2015
SP - 63
EP - 78
JO - Europe's Journal of Psychology
JF - Europe's Journal of Psychology
ER -