Becoming a Nursing Program Graduate: Transitions and Adaptations by Eastern European Immigrant Students of a Midwest Community College

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-76
Author(s):  
Dubravca Iordan ◽  
Gene Roth ◽  
Brian Vivona
Ethnicities ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 146879682110051
Author(s):  
Ana Tankosić ◽  
Sender Dovchin

Linguistic racism explores the varied ideologies that may generate and endorse monolingual, native, and normative language practices, while reinforcing the discrimination and injustice directed towards language users whose language and communicative repertoires are not necessarily perceived as standard and normal. This article, thus, investigates linguistic racism, as a form of existing, but newly defined, racism against unconventional ethnic language practices experienced by Eastern-European immigrant women in the Australian workplace. Our ethnographic study shows that, once these women directly or subtly exhibit their non-nativism, through a limited encounter with local expressions, non-native language skills, and ethnic accents, they become victims of covert and overt linguistic racism in the form of social exclusion, mockery, mimicking, and malicious sarcasm in the hierarchical power environment of the workplace. As a result, these migrants can suffer from long-lasting psychological trauma and distress, emotional hurdles, loss of credibility, and language-based inferiority complexes. We, as researchers, need to highlight the importance of combatting workplace linguistic racism and revealing language realities of underprivileged communities. In that way, we can assist them in adapting to host societies and help them regain some degree of power equality in their institutional environments.


2012 ◽  
Vol 642 (1) ◽  
pp. 186-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martina Cvajner

This article, based on five years of ethnographic fieldwork, describes the strategies for the presentation of the Self employed by Eastern European immigrant women in the Italian northeast. These middle-aged women migrated alone, are employed as live-in care workers, and often lack legal status. For them, migration is a deeply felt trauma, which they narrate as being forced upon them by the collapse of the USSR and the failures of the transition to a market economy. They perceive their life in Italy as degrading, their work is stressful and undignified, they miss their children, and they are often seen as poor mothers with questionable morals. Consequently, they seek to dilute the social stigma, presenting positive images of their selves and claiming respect from a variety of audiences. The women continuously endeavor to define their current condition as accidental and temporary and to assert their right to a better future.


2017 ◽  
pp. 165-178
Author(s):  
Aida Spahic-Mihajlovic ◽  
Alekhya Buddhavarapu ◽  
Neha Sharma

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 384-399
Author(s):  
Helena C. Araújo ◽  
Antonina Tereshchenko ◽  
Sofia Branco Sousa ◽  
Celia Jenkins

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