"You Keep Yourself Strong": A Discourse Analysis of African Women Asylum Seekers' Talk about Emotions

Date

2014-01

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

DOI

Volume Title

Publisher

Bridgewater State University

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Abstract

The current study investigates how asylum-seeking African women use talk about emotion to construct empowered roles for themselves. A discourse analysis was conducted on interviews with African asylum-seeking women. Participants used two interacting repertoires, ‘rejecting pity’ and ‘being strong’, to resist inferior positions. By constructing themselves as strong and not needing pity, participants positioned themselves as in control of their lives, and thus presented as responsible and capable mothers, a role they are accountable for. Clinical implications and findings for future research are discussed.

Description

Keywords

African, Asylum-Seeker, Emotions, Strong, Women

Citation

Clare, M., Goodman, S., Liebling, H. and Laing, H (2014) “You keep yourself strong”: A discourse analysis of African women asylum seekers’ talk about emotions. Journal of International Women's Studies, 15 (1), pp. 83-95

Rights

Research Institute

Institute for Psychological Science