Publication | Closed Access
The Emergence of Cultural Self-Constructs: Autobiographical Memory and Self-Description in European American and Chinese Children.
377
Citations
62
References
2003
Year
EducationAmerican ChildrenCultural FactorModest ToneCultural StudiesPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyCultural IdentityCultural Self-constructsCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentChild PsychologySocial IdentityChinese ChildrenCultural RealityEarly Childhood DevelopmentAutobiographical MemorySocial CognitionChild DevelopmentCultureCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural AnthropologyCultural Psychology
This study examined the emergence of cultural self-constructs as reflected in children's remembered and conceptual aspects of the self. European American and Chinese children in preschool through 2nd grade participated (N=180). Children each recounted 4 autobiographical events and described themselves in response to open-ended questions. American children often provided elaborate and detailed memories focusing on their own roles, preferences, and feelings; they also frequently described themselves in terms of personal attributes, abstract dispositions, and inner traits in a positive light. Chinese children provided relatively skeletal accounts of past experiences that centered on social interactions and daily routines, and they often described themselves in terms of social roles, context-specific characteristics, and oven behaviors in a neutral or modest tone. Findings are discussed in light of the self as a constructed meaning system of culture that emerges early in life.
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