Progress in Asian Social Psychology: Conceptual and Empirical Contributions
By (Author) Kuo-Shu Yang
By (author) Kwang-Kuo Hwang
By (author) Paul Pedersen
By (author) Ikuo Daibo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 2003
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Politics and government
302.095
Hardback
344
This volume presents ways of thinking dramatically different from mainstream psychology, which is seen by many as primarily a product of Western civilization. Asian social psychologists in this edited collection apply Asian perspectives to issues of major concern in their societies, including parental beliefs about shame and moral socialization in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the United States; achievement motivation in Taiwan and the United States; and the effects of school violence on the psychological adjustment of Korean adolescents. Other chapters examine the role of social psychologists in Confucian societies, and group dynamics in Japan. The authors believe psychological research using an indigenous approach will enable Asian as well as non-Asian psychologists to understand the cognitions and behaviors of Asian people more accurately. Scholars and students interested in Asian psychology, social, cultural and cross-cultural psychology will find this volume of interest.
Given that East Asian social psychologists are frequently aware of the political underpinnings and implications of their work, it is not exaggerated to say that Progress in Asian Social Psychology represents not only a scientific but also a politically significant effort.-International Psychology Reporter
Very little work has appeared on Asian social psychology, and this important volume fills that significant void....this volume's greatest strength is its focus on current empirical social psychological work with Korean, Chinese, and Japanese populations. This volume will be of interest to advanced scholars of cross-cultural social psychology and multicultural psychology and in the applied clinical/counseling fields. References at the end of each chapter. Recommended. Graduate and research collections only.-Choice
"Given that East Asian social psychologists are frequently aware of the political underpinnings and implications of their work, it is not exaggerated to say that Progress in Asian Social Psychology represents not only a scientific but also a politically significant effort."-International Psychology Reporter
"Very little work has appeared on Asian social psychology, and this important volume fills that significant void....this volume's greatest strength is its focus on current empirical social psychological work with Korean, Chinese, and Japanese populations. This volume will be of interest to advanced scholars of cross-cultural social psychology and multicultural psychology and in the applied clinical/counseling fields. References at the end of each chapter. Recommended. Graduate and research collections only."-Choice
KUO-SHU YANG is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at National Taiwan University, a Research Fellow at the Institute of Ethnology at Academia Sinica in Taiwan, and President of the Asian Association of Social Psychology. KWANG-KUO HWANG is Professor of Psychology at National Taiwan University and Principle Investigator for the Ministry of Education project, In Search of Excellence for Indigenous Psychological Research. PAUL B. PEDERSEN is Visiting Professor of Psychology at the University of Hawaii and Series Editor for the Greenwood series, Contributions in Psychology. IKUO DAIBO is Professor of Psychology at Osaka University.