The Evolving Mainstream: Majority-Group Acculturation Through a Decolonial Lens
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
This chapter uses Critical Whiteness Studies and Critical Race Theory to interrogate the phenomenon of majority-group acculturation, critiquing psychology’s historical “unidirectional gaze” which has overwhelmingly focused on minority acculturation. It argues that this neglect stems from the field’s colonial roots and paternalistic framings. To re-center the analysis, this chapter applies a decolonial lens, deconstructing the “mainstream” as a product of an invisible racial hierarchy. It then reinterprets empirical findings: reframing “own-culture maintenance” as a defense of racial normativity and “other-culture adoption” as a selective process often governed by dominant interests. Finally, the chapter distinguishes between colonial cultural appropriation and decolonial cultural exchange, advocating for an antiracist psychology that analyzes intercultural relations as a negotiation of power.