"I want to lift my people up": Exploring the psychological correlates of racial themes within the life stories of midlife Black Americans.

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Tác giả: Ambar Guzman, Sirin Jitklongsub, Ananya Mayukha, Dan P McAdams

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 949.5074 *Greece

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Journal of personality , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 688046

OBJECTIVE: This study explores how middle-aged Black Americans talk about race, without prompting, while telling their life stories. METHOD: Drawing upon a dataset of lengthy Life Story Interviews (N = 70), we first employed a keyword search to identify race-relevant interview scenes for each participant. Next, we conducted a thematic analysis of these scenes to identify salient racial narrative themes. Finally, we coded race-relevant scenes to examine the psychological correlates of racial narrative themes. RESULTS: We identified 460 total racially themed Life Story Interview scenes, with the number of racially themed scenes ranging from 1 to 17 across participants' interviews. Racial narrative themes included Community of Care, Black Cultural Identity, Multiculturalism, Activism, Encounter with Racism, Systemic Racism, and Racial Reckoning. Quantitative analyses highlight a relationship between racial narrative themes and psychological measures of wisdom and generativity. CONCLUSION: This study offers insight into the ways that race manifests in the life stories of Black Americans and highlights the importance of considering race in the study of narrative identity, and personality, more broadly.
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