role of culture in personality development

11

Upload: umar-jalil

Post on 26-Mar-2015

1.730 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: role of culture in personality development
Page 2: role of culture in personality development

Contents:

PERSONALITY

CULTURE

PERSONLITY AND CULTURE

Role of Culture in forming Personality

FACTOR AFFECTIG PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT

References

Page 3: role of culture in personality development

Personality comes from the Greek word "persona", meaning "mask"

The word personality derives from the Latin word persona. which means mask. The study of personality can be understood as the study of masks that people wear. These are the persona that people project and display, but also includes the inner parts of psychological experience which we collectively call our self.

Personality:

Personality is the supreme realization of the innate idiosyncrasy of a living being. It is an act of high courage flung in the face of life, the absolute affirmation of all that constitutes the individual, the most successful adaptation to the universal condition of existence coupled with the greatest possible freedom for self-determination.

Various definitions of personality:

"Deceptive masquerade or mimicry." "The entire organization of a human being at any stage of development." "Levels or layers of dispositions, usually with a unifying or integrative

principle at the top." "The integration of those systems or habits that represent an individuals

characteristic adjustments to the environment." "The way in which the person does such things as remembering, thinking or

loving." "Those characteristics that account for consistent patterns of behavior" "Personality is not an existing substantive entity to be searched for but a

complex construct to be developed and defined by the observer."(Smith & Vetter, 1982, p.5)

Page 4: role of culture in personality development

Culture:

“Culture is the collective programming of the human mind that distinguishes the members of one human group from those of another. Culture in this sense is a

system of collectively held values.” -- Geert Hofstede

Culture and Personality, sometimes also known as Psychological Anthropology, investigates the role of culture in forming personality in an "ecocultural framework," and considers problems of individual adjustments to demands of culture. The course focuses on comparative psychological and sociopsychological approaches to culture.

Role of Culture in forming Personality Personality is the key factor in defining individual uniqueness and shaping an individual's course through life. Culture is the way of life. Culture is not only our conscious values, but also it's our assumptions about the way things are. Humans perceive and believe according to their cultural development. Culture represents one of the important factors of the personality modeling. The study of culture and personality seeks to understand the growth and development of personal or social identity as it relates to the surrounding social environment.The cultural features of a society generate certain distinctive features in the children’s socialization. By using some common socializing elements and mechanisms, there may be formed common features of personality or a configuration of personality features typical for the members of a society. Within each society, there are one or several types of personality that the children have to copy. In the European cultures or in those of European type, to the main type of personality are associated the following features: sociability, kindness, co-operation, and even competitiveness, orientation to practice and efficiency, punctuality. The family and other factors of socialization transmit to the children these features, the conformation to them being controlled at a societal level.

Page 5: role of culture in personality development

The relation between culture and personality is obvious, while the personality forming consists mostly in the internalization of the elements of a culture. In a stable and integrated culture, the personality is an individual aspect of the culture, and the culture is a collective aspect of the personality. In each society, the dominant culture coexists with a certain number of subcultures and countercultures. The socialization made within a subculture adds specific elements to the modal personality features. Thus, there appear differentiated personalities in relation to the subcultures (these latter being constituted on ethnical, social class, religious and occupational criteria.). One can differentiate the personality of a villager from that of a townsman, the personality of a worker from that of an intellectual, the personality of a Jew from that of a Turk etc.Margaret Mead, a well-known pioneer in the field of Psychological Anthropology, studied cross-cultural patterns of child rearing. Mead's most famous study took place in 1925 in Samoa. Mead studied Samoan adolescents and determined that they were not marked by tension and rebellion as were adolescents in the United States. During her study, Samoan children were found to have more casual relationships with their parents and they also learn about sexuality naturally in the course of their daily lives. It was Mead's determination that American teenagers find adolescence stressful because they learn about sexuality at the same time they must break strong bonds with their parents. Mead also studied gender roles in three New Guinea groups and concluded that gender roles are not entirely biologically determined, but are learned during the process of enculturation.Cultural psychologists have noted that some aspects of personality differ across cultural groups. For example, Americans and Asians have slightly different conceptions of self. American culture promotes a view of the self as independent. American children tend to describe themselves in terms of personal attributes, values, and achievements and they learn to be self-reliant, to compete with others, and to value their uniqueness. Many Asian cultures, such as those of Japan and China, promote a view of the self as interdependent. Children from these cultures tend to describe themselves in terms of which groups they belong to. They learn to rely on others, to be modest about achievements, and to fit into groups. Starting in infancy, we learn how to be human through interactions with other people in our culture. Without social stimulation, love, modeling and communication with others, a child does not become a normal social creature

Page 6: role of culture in personality development

because it does not adequately develop language, or emotional expressiveness, or expected social responsiveness, or personality. Culture cannot be separated from personality; culture mediates all thought. Human experiences and social interactions form personality marked by thought, communication, actions, customs, beliefs, values and institutions of a racial, ethnic, religious, and social group type. Personal identity is deeply tied to cultural identity. We often believe we are destined to be like our parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents; to a great extent we are like them and their culture. Whether we are aware of it or not, we are the carriers of our cultural heritage that forms an essential part of our personal identity. It is possible, but difficult to change our understanding of our culture, but it is not possible to totally separate our personal identity from our culture. How we judge another person is a product in part of how well the individual lives up to the cultural values we ourselves have learned from our parents, teachers, and the others of significance around us. Personality is shaped by both genetic and environmental influences. Among the most important of the latter are cultural influences. Culture is transmitted through language and the modeling of behavior when conditions permit humans to communicate through shared language, by living in the same historic period, and when they are sufficiently proximal to influence each other. Ecology, among other factors, shapes the culture, which in turn shapes the socialization patterns, which shape some of the variance of personality. Broad empirical support for such a model does exist. In addition to these factors, we consider other constructs that are needed for a better understanding of the way culture influences personality.

Page 7: role of culture in personality development
Page 8: role of culture in personality development

References:www.accessmylibrary.comwww.answers.yahoo.comwww.as.ua.edu www.blogs.psychologytoday.comwww.directessays.comwww.lonnd.comwww.sparknotes.com