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Archive | 1992

Human Motives and Cultural Models

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1995

Cognitive processes and personality

Roy G. D'Andrade

One of the basic undertakings for cognitive anthropology is to work out how representational aspects of culture affect the individual. In the last chapter a sketch of how cultural schemas affect perception, memory, and reasoning was presented. In this chapter, the relation between cultural schemas and the personality will be explored. By personality I mean primarily the emotional and motivational aspects of human behavior. The general argument is that it is through linkages with emotion and motivation that cultural schemas affect human action. Emotion In the western folk model of the mind, emotion contrasts sharply with cognition. In the folk model emotions art feelings which have little to do with what one thinks. Feelings include localized physical sensations like hunger and pain, as well as unlocalized sensations like anger and joy. According to the folk model, one can direct ones thoughts but one cannot control ones feelings, which are a natural consequence of events. And feelings can be so strong they prevent clear thinking and lead to irrational action. In the folk model, thought and feeling are often cast as opposing forces. This view of emotion and thought has changed radically over the past thirty years in both psychology and anthropology. A series of experiments in psychology carried out by Stanley Schacter and Jerome Singer in the early 1960s, now described in almost every introductory psychology textbook, are the canonical reference for this change.


Archive | 1992

Human motives and cultural models: Cultural models as motives

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1992

Human motives and cultural models: List of contributors

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1992

Human motives and cultural models: List of illustrations

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1992

Human motives and cultural models: How do cultural models become motives?

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1992

Human motives and cultural models: Cultural models as motives reconsidered

Roy G. D'Andrade; Claudia Strauss

List of illustrations Preface 1. Models and motives Claudia Strauss Part I. Cultural Models as Motives: 2. Schemas and motivation Roy G. DAndrade 3. Ghost busters in anthropology Richard A. Shweder Part II. How Do Cultural Models Become Motives?: 4. How cultural systems become desire: a case study of American romance Dorothy C. Holland 5. The motivational force of self-understanding: evidence from wives inner conflicts Naomi Quinn 6. The directive force of morality tales in a Mexican community Holly F. Mathews 7. Learning to be an American parent: how cultural models gain directive force Sara Harkness, Charles M. Super and Constance H. Keefer Part III. Cultural Models as Motives Reconsidered: 8. Motivated models Catherine Lutz 9. What makes Tony run? Schemas as motives reconsidered Claudia Strauss 10. Afterword Roy G. DAndrade Index.


Archive | 1995

The Development of Cognitive Anthropology

Roy G. D'Andrade


Archive | 2008

A study of personal and cultural values : American, Japanese, and Vietnamese

Roy G. D'Andrade


Archive | 2008

A study of personal and cultural values

Roy G. D'Andrade

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