
Navigating Multiple Identities: Race, Gender, Culture, Nationality, and Roles
Author(s): Ruthellen Josselson (Editor), Michele Harway
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication Date: 1 April 2012
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 280 pages
- ISBN-10: 0199732078
- ISBN-13: 9780199732074
Book Description
In our increasingly complex, globalized world, many people carry conflicting psychosocial identities. They live at the edges of more than one communal affiliation, with the challenge of bridging different loyalties and identifications.
Navigating Multiple Identities considers those who are navigating across racial minority or majority status, various cultural expectations and values, gender identities, and roles. The chapters collected here by Josselson and Harway explore the ways in which individuals attain or maintain personal integration in the face of often shifting personal or social locations, and how they navigate the complexity of their multiple identities.Editorial Reviews
Review
“Ruthellen Josselson and Michele Harway have made a very significant contribution to our understanding of multiple identities through this book. They bring together international scholars to advance multicultural studies and a deeper appreciation and celebration of human diversity in our ever changing, multicultural world.” — James M. O’Neil, Professor of Educational Psychology and Family Studies, University of Connecticut
“This volume breaks entirely new ground in the understanding of how individuals with a diversity of identity elements may come to hold, and at times integrate, these dimensions into a coherent sense of self. Engaging, reflective, and, insightful, this book presents a powerful array of chapters that should serve as a foundation for researchers and practitioners alike who are attempting to chart and respond to diversity in identity development.”– Jane Kroger, Professor Emeritus, University of Tromsø, and Research Associate, Western Washington University
“This book provides superb insights into the phenomenon of multiple identities. It shows in a convincing way how multiplicity has the potential to contribute to self-richness and self-integration. I strongly recommend it to any psychologist or social scientist who is interested in how people organize their selves and identities as part of a globalizing society.” — Hubert Hermans, Scientific Director of the International Institute for the Dialogical Self
“An exciting new book on the intersectionality of multiple identities, this edited volume challenges the old assumptions of psychology and society that tend to categorize identity singularly or dichotomously. This book explores the more realistic process of how persons navigate a variety of socially-constructed, intersecting identities in a myriad of settings and circumstances. It focuses on theoretical frameworks, rich narrative examples, and applications in discussing ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, race, and other variables. This book is a must-read for students, clinicians, and researchers.” — Roberta L. Nutt, Visiting Professor and Training Director, Counseling Psychology Program, University of Houston
About the Author
Michele Harway is Professor in the School of Psychology at Fielding Graduate University. She is the founding chair of the clinical psychology doctoral program at Antioch University, and until recently, a member of its core faculty. She also maintains a small private practice in Westlake Village, California, where she specializes in couples and family psychology and working with trauma survivors. She is board certified in Couples and Family Psychology (American Board of Professional Psychology). Dr. Harway has authored or edited ten books and many book chapters and journal articles, and has presented at numerous professional conferences on couples therapy, cultural issues, domestic violence, trauma survival, and gender and family issues.
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