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Emotions in collectivist and individualist contexts.
328
Citations
13
References
2001
Year
Affective VariableSocial PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceEmpathyEducationCultural FactorSocial SciencesPsychologyAffective ScienceEmotional ResponseSocial WorthEmotional ExpressionSocial IdentityApplied Social PsychologyCultural SensitivityQuestionnaire StudyCollective SelfCultureCultural DifferencesCross-cultural PerspectiveIndividualist ContextsEmotionCultural BeliefsCultural Psychology
A theory of cultural differences in emotions was tested in a questionnaire study. Hypotheses about the differences between emotion in individualist and collectivist contexts covered different components of emotion: concerns and appraisals, action readiness, social sharing, and belief changes. The questionnaire focused on 6 types of events that were rated as similar in meaning across cultures. Participants were 86 Dutch individualist respondents and 171 Surinamese and Turkish collectivist respondents living in the Netherlands. As compared with emotions in individualist cultures, emotions in collectivist cultures (a) were more grounded in assessments of social worth and of shifts in relative social worth, (b) were to a large extent taken to reflect reality rather than the inner world of the individual, and (c) belonged to the self-other relationship rather than being confined to the subjectivity of the self.
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