Title of article
THE INNER SELF IN THREE COUNTRIES
Author/Authors
ROMIN W. TAFARODI CHRISTOPHER LO، نويسنده , , SUSUMU YAMAGUCHI، نويسنده , , WINCY W.-S. LEE، نويسنده , , HARUKO KATSURA، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
21
From page
97
To page
117
Abstract
Personal identity involves continuity of the inner or private self—the intimately familiar me—across time
and place. Is this continuity experienced to a similar extent across cultures? East Asian cultures place greater
moral emphasis than doWestern cultures on the contextual adjustment of personal behavior. This adjustive
focus translates into greater variation in the outwardly presented self across contexts, raising the question of
whether the inner self is also experienced as less continuous or unchanging by East Asians. To examine this
issue and its implications, we asked Canadian, Chinese, and Japanese students to answer a set of questions
about the inner self and its behavioral expression. Their responses confirmed a weaker sense of continuity
amongthe Chinese and Japanese but also revealed that socially appropriate expression of the inner self is valued
and sought in all three countries. In addition, East Asians claimed to experience self-expression in fewer
activity domains than did Canadians.
Keywords
Hong Kong , personal identity , JAPAN , self-continuity , Canada
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708165
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