Universalism without Uniformity
Explorations in Mind and Culture
Universalism without Uniformity
Explorations in Mind and Culture
The contributors to Universalism without Uniformity offer tools for bridging silos that have historically separated anthropology’s attention to culture and psychology’s interest in universal mental processes. Throughout, they seek to answer intricate yet fundamental questions about why we are motivated to find meaning in everything around us and, in turn, how we constitute the cultural worlds we inhabit through our intentional involvement in them. Laying bare entrenched disciplinary blind spots, this book offers a trove of insights on issues such as morality, emotional functioning, and conceptions of the self across cultures. Filled with impeccable empirical research coupled with broadly applicable theoretical reflections on taking psychological diversity seriously, Universalism without Uniformity breaks new ground in the study of mind and culture.
336 pages | 1 line drawing, 9 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2017
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Universalism without Uniformity
Usha Menon and Julia Cassaniti
Part I: Breaking Down Barriers through the Study of Culture in the Study of Mind
One / Challenging Developmental Doctrines through Cross-Cultural Research
Robert A. LeVine
Two / How Cultural Psychology Can Help Us See “Divinity” in a Secular World
Jonathan Haidt and Paul Rozin
Three / Beyond Universal Taxonomic Frameworks in Cultural Social Psychology
Joan G. Miller
Four / From Value to Lifeworld
Roy D’Andrade
Part II: Psychological Processes across Culture: One Mind, Many Mentalities
Section 1: Emotion: A Multiplicity of Feeling
Five / “Kama Muta” or “Being Moved by Love”: A Bootstrapping Approach to the Ontology and Epistemology of an Emotion
Alan P. Fiske, Thomas Schubert, and Beate Seibt
Six / Unsettling Basic States: New Directions in the Cross-Cultural Study of Emotion
Julia Cassaniti
Seven / Rasa and the Cultural Shaping of Human Consciousness
Usha Menon
Section 2: Intersubjectivity: Social Trust, Interpersonal Attachment, and Agency
Eight / The Socialization of Social Trust: Cultural Pluralism in Understanding Attachment and Trust in Children
Thomas S. Weisner
Nine / An Attachment-Theoretical Approach to Religious Cognition
Charles W. Nuckolls
Part III: Implications of Psychological Pluralism for a Multicultural World: “Why Can’t We All Just Get Along?”
Section 1: Challenges to the Modern Nation-State: Globalization’s Impact on Morality, Identity, and the Person
Ten / Acculturation, Assimilation, and the “View from Manywheres” in the Hmong Diaspora
Jacob R. Hickman
Eleven / Vexed Tolerance: Cultural Psychology on Multiculturalism
Pinky Hota
Twelve / Equality, Not Special Protection: Multiculturalism, Feminism, and Female Circumcision in Western Liberal Democracies
Fuambai Ahmadu
Section 2: Mental Health: Variations in Healthy Minds across Cultures
Thirteen / Cultural Psychology and the Globalization of Western Psychiatric Practices
Randall Horton
Fourteen / Toward a Cultural Psychology of Trauma and Trauma-Related Disorders
Byron Good and Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good
Fifteen / The Risky Cartography of Drawing Moral Maps: With Special Reference to Economic Inequality and Sex-Selective Abortion
Richard A. Shweder
Index
Be the first to know
Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!