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      Global Psychologies 

      Varieties of Global Psychology: Cultural Diversity and Constructions of the Self

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      Palgrave Macmillan UK

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          Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation.

          Psychological Review, 98(2), 224-253
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            Race as biology is fiction, racism as a social problem is real: Anthropological and historical perspectives on the social construction of race.

            Racialized science seeks to explain human population differences in health, intelligence, education, and wealth as the consequence of immutable, biologically based differences between "racial" groups. Recent advances in the sequencing of the human genome and in an understanding of biological correlates of behavior have fueled racialized science, despite evidence that racial groups are not genetically discrete, reliably measured, or scientifically meaningful. Yet even these counterarguments often fail to take into account the origin and history of the idea of race. This article reviews the origins of the concept of race, placing the contemporary discussion of racial differences in an anthropological and historical context. (c) 2005 APA
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              Cultures and Selves: A Cycle of Mutual Constitution.

              The study of culture and self casts psychology's understanding of the self, identity, or agency as central to the analysis and interpretation of behavior and demonstrates that cultures and selves define and build upon each other in an ongoing cycle of mutual constitution. In a selective review of theoretical and empirical work, we define self and what the self does, define culture and how it constitutes the self (and vice versa), define independence and interdependence and determine how they shape psychological functioning, and examine the continuing challenges and controversies in the study of culture and self. We propose that a self is the "me" at the center of experience-a continually developing sense of awareness and agency that guides actions and takes shape as the individual, both brain and body, becomes attuned to various environments. Selves incorporate the patterning of their various environments and thus confer particular and culture-specific form and function to the psychological processes they organize (e.g., attention, perception, cognition, emotion, motivation, interpersonal relationship, group). In turn, as selves engage with their sociocultural contexts, they reinforce and sometimes change the ideas, practices, and institutions of these environments.
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                2018
                June 26 2018
                : 21-37
                10.1057/978-1-349-95816-0_2
                5759b2d6-4184-497e-a94e-7f28e20cae89
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