Abstract
Social identity is defined, in part, as the sense of “we-ness” an individual forms with a social group, such as race or gender. The social identity literature, however, is largely divided by identities—with racial identity conceptualized, measured, and interpreted separately from gender identity—rather than examining how youth understand these group memberships at their intersections (i.e., “we” Black girls or “we” white boys). In the current qualitative analysis we examine how Black and white early adolescents (
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