Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Third-Culture Kids in the Obama Administration

The below article is a bit Pollyanna-ish, but still fascinating. Maybe I should apply for a job at the Obama administration! It's just too cold up there in D.C., though.

When I read stuff about third-culture kids, I recognize a lot of traits I have myself. But I don't feel like embracing the term. It seems like it's most often applied to the children of upper-class parents and intellectuals, although it should really apply to a much broader group, including the children of just-plain immigrants who work in places like restaurants and construction zones. My upbringing was somewhere in the middle. I definitely didn't get an elite early education, although I eventually ended up at a good college.

I think the phrase "1.5gen" is something I can embrace more. Even though I'm only half of a 1.5gen... or perhaps the square root of one?

I do agree that with this kind of background, you end up with a thick skin because you get used to cultural rejection and being treated like an alien. It either completely screws you up or makes you very independent.

Obama's 'Third Culture' Team

Obama has packed his staff with so-called “Third Culture Kids”—people who grew up outside the U.S. New research suggests this group shares common psychological traits that could shape his administration.

John Quincy Adams lived in France, and young Franklin Delano Roosevelt visited Europe often enough to master French and German, but Barack Obama is the first modern American president to have spent some of his formative years outside the United States. It is a trait he shares with several appointees to the new administration: White House advisor Valerie Jarrett was a child in Tehran and London, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner was raised in east Africa, India, Thailand, China and Japan as the son of a Ford Foundation executive, and National Security Advisor James L. Jones was raised in Paris. (Also, Bill Richardson, tipped as Secretary of Commerce, grew up in Mexico City.)

This is more than a trivial coincidence. So-called “Third Culture Kids”—and the adults they become”—share certain emotional and psychological traits that may exert great influence in the new administration. According to a body of sociological literature devoted to children who spend a portion of their developmental years outside their “passport country,” the classic profile of a “TCK” is someone with a global perspective who is socially adaptable and intellectually flexible. He or she is quick to think outside the box and can appreciate and reconcile different points of view. Beyond whatever diversity in background or appearance a TCK may bring to the party, there is a diversity of thought as well.

But TCKs can also feel rootless and detached. The great challenge for maturing Third Culture Kids is to forge a sense of personal and cultural identity from the various environments to which they been exposed. Barack Obama’s memoir, Dreams of My Father, could serve as a textbook in the TCK syllabus, a classic search for self-definition, described in living color. Obama’s colleagues on the Harvard Law Review were among the first to note both his exceptional skill at mediating among competing arguments and the aloofness that made his own views hard to discern. That cool manner of seeming “above it all” is also a classic feature of the Third Culture Kid.

The TCKs’ identity struggles can be painful and difficult. The literature documents addictive behaviors, troubled marriages and fitful careers. But meeting this challenge can become a TCK’s greatest strength. Learning to take the positive pieces from a variety of experiences and create a strong sense of “This is who I am, no matter where I am” gives a steadiness when the world around is in flux or chaos”—which helps explain “no-drama Obama.”

Among those of us who study Third Culture Kids (almost always because we are TCKs), it has been both gratifying and frustrating to watch “one of us” run for the White House. We began obsessively pointing out to each other the telltale signifiers of the TCK that so often went unremarked in the mainstream press.

“I laughed when I heard a commentator call Barack exotic and elitist,” says Lois Bushong, an American who grew up in Costa Rica and now works a therapist for internationally mobile families. “How exotic or elitist can it be to go home to visit your grandmother, even if she lives in Hawaii? She’s still your grandma. This TV guy seemed to forget that the world many see ‘exotic’ is simply home for TCKs.”

But we also despaired when his opponents denigrated the importance of Obama’s childhood in Indonesia and Hawaii. “How can they say his international childhood doesn’t count when it comes to foreign affairs?” sputtered my friend and colleague, Paulette Bethel. “That’s just crazy. Barack’s been negotiating between cultural worlds since the day of his birth. No one will have to teach him this skill. It’s already second nature to him!”

Bethel feels vindicated by the collection of strong personalities that Obama has invited into the new administration. “He’s lived with so many differences around him in his lifetime, they don’t threaten him anymore,” she says.

In 1984, Dr. Ted Ward, then a sociologist at Michigan State University, called TCKs “the prototype citizens of the future,” anticipating a time when a childhood lived in various cultures would be the norm rather than the exception. It seems that time is now.

And the characteristics derived from an expat childhood may be well suited to the challenges facing the new administration. The economic crisis, for one, demonstrates how interdependent world cultures have become, and its solution will undoubtedly require the unconventional thinking that comes more easily to a Third Culture Kid. Even though Tim Geithner is not an economist by training, he apparently demonstrated such a keen problem-solving skills in the financial arena that the stock market jumped 500 points on the news of his appointment. Returning to Japan as an adult and speaking the language he learned as a child have given him an unusually deep understanding of the global economy.

As TCKs, we have had the joy, and the challenge, of being raised in many places and cultures. Now we get to see whether the values of the TCK can be a force for good on the world stage.

1 comment:

Christie D. said...

Thanks - this was an interesting article.

Just before the election I suddenly became curious about Obama's years in Indonesia, and watched 2 or 3 reports about it on YouTube (they were nice reports by major news organizations). I was getting tears in my eyes watching one of them, thinking, "Oh, he's just like my baby!" It described Obama going to regular Indonesian public school from around 1st to 4th grade, playing with his Indonesian friends, etc., and his former teacher appeared, saying that he had been a good student who got on well with the others and loved drawing superheroes in his spare time. His friends from that time also spoke about him and posed for a photo in support of him.

My younger son is in 3rd grade in Japanese school now (he has been there since day 1 of 1st grade), and the grade-school Obama in Indonesia they described seemed so like my younger son and his experience in Japanese school... I told my family, "Our little R---- is just like Obama, who might be elected president in a few days!" I was thinking about how my son's classmates will always remember him, even though they might not be called on for news interviews like Obama's former classmates were! :)