ISBN:
0898621461
Language:
English
Pages:
VIII, 247 S.
,
Ill.
Series Statement:
Culture and human development
DDC:
306.875/0954
Keywords:
Broers en zusters
;
Culturele invloeden
;
Frères et soeurs - Asie du Sud
;
Frères et soeurs - Études transculturelles
;
Brothers and sisters Cross-cultural studies
;
Brothers and sisters
;
Geschwisterbeziehung
;
Kulturvergleich
;
Südasien
;
Südasien
;
Südasien
;
Geschwisterbeziehung
;
Geschwisterbeziehung
;
Kulturvergleich
Abstract:
Do different types of households and family structures affect the development of sibling relationships? Are cultural concepts of personhood expressed in siblingship? How do brothers and sisters respond to the expectation that they should get along? Despite the obvious importance of sibling relationships in human development, questions such as these are not readily answerable for a number of reasons: To date, psychologists have not adequately considered the impact of culture on sibling relationships; anthropologists generally have not studied cultural processes as they unfold in individual development; and, perhaps most important, few studies of siblings outside the United States and Britain currently exist
Abstract:
Addressing the issues of greatest concern to psychologists and anthropologists alike, this interdisciplinary volume - including social and structural, developmental psychological, psychoanalytic, and ethnopsychological perspectives - examines the development of sibling relationships in several different regions. The book opens with an overview of sibling similarities and differences around the world and an introduction to the cross-cultural study of sibling relations. The volume is then divided into two parts. The first focuses on the organization of sibling relations in childhood and adulthood. Chapters analyze the organization of sibling relations as they relate to socialization practices, family economics and structure, and customs of marriage and dowry. The second part of the book focuses on the representation of cultural and psychological meanings of sibling relations through mythology, astrology, and life history
Abstract:
Rounding out the volume is a discussion of how this work contributes to the developmental literature. A groundbreaking work on the roles of brothers and sisters, this volume also constitutes one of the best available regional studies of culture and society. As such, it is invaluable reading for developmental psychologists, anthropologists, and students of Asian studies. Written in an accessible and engaging style, it also serves as an ancillary text for courses in culture and cognition and cross-cultural psychology, psychological anthropology, and family studies
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