Indigenous and cultural psychology : understanding people in context / edited by Uichol Kim, Kuo-shu Yang, Kwang-kuo Hwang. [print]
Material type: TextSeries: International and cultural psychology seriesPublication details: New York, New York : Springer, (c)2006.Description: xxi, 518 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780387286617
- 9780387286624
- GN512.H991.I535 2006
- GN512
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) | G. Allen Fleece Library CIRCULATING COLLECTION | Non-fiction | GN512.I5118 2006 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923001124524 |
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I. Theoretical and methodological issues. 1. Contributions to indigenous and cultural psychology: understanding people in context Uichol Kim, Kuo-Shu Yang and Kwang-Kuo Hwang -- 2. The scientific foundations of indigenous and cultural psychology: the transactional approach Uichol Kim and Young-Shin Park -- 3. The importance of constructive realism for the indigenous psychologies approach Fritz G. Wallner and Martin J. Jandl -- 4. Constructive realism and Confucian relationalism: an epistemological strategy for the development of indigenous psychology Kwang-Kuo Hwang -- 5. From decolonizing psychology to the development of a cross-indigenous perspective in methodology: the Philippine experience Rogelia Pe-Pua -- II. Family and socialization. 6. Parental ethnotheories of child development: looking beyond independence and individualism in American belief systems Carolyn Pope Edwards and others 7. Close interpersonal relationships among Japanese: amae as distinguished from attachment and dependence Susumu Yamaguchi and Jukari Ariizumi -- 8. Affect and early moral socialization: some insights and contributions from indigenous psychological studies in Taiwan Heidi Fung -- 9. Cultures are like all other cultures, like some other cultures, like no other culture James Georgas and Kostas Mylonas -- III. Cognitive processes. 10. The mutual relevance of indigenous psychology and morality Lutz H. Eckensberger -- 11. Naive dialecticism and the tao of Chinese thought Kaiping Peng, Julie Spencer-Rodgers and Zhong Nian -- 12. Indian perspectives on cognition R.C. Mishra -- IV. Self and personality. 13. Indigenous personality research: the Chinese case Kuo-Shu Yang -- 14. An historic-psycho-socio-cultural look at the self in Mexico Roland Diaz Loving -- 15. The Chinese conception of the self: towards a person-making perspective Yang Chung-Fang -- 16. Naive psychology of Koreans' interpersonal mind and behavior in close relationships Sang-Chin Choi and Kibum Kim -- V. Application. 17. Humanism-materialism: century-long Polish cultural origins and twenty years of research in cultural psychology Pavel Boski -- 18. Chinese conceptions of justice and reward allocation Zhi-Xue Zhang -- 19. Family, parent-child relationship, and academic achievement in Korea: indigenous, cultural, and psychological analysis Young-Shin Park and Uichol Kim -- 20. Paternalism: towards conceptual refinement and operationalization Zeynep Aycan -- 21. Creating indigenous psychologies: insights from empirical social studies of the science of psychology John G. Adair.
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