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Comparative Study
Spontaneous self-descriptions and ethnic identities in individualistic and collectivistic cultures.
- E Rhee, J S Uleman, H K Lee, and R J Roman.
- Department of Psychology, New York University, New York 10003, USA.
- J Pers Soc Psychol. 1995 Jul 1;69(1):142-52.
AbstractThe Twenty Statements Test (TST) was administered in Seoul and New York, to 454 students from 2 cultures that emphasize collectivism and individualism, respectively. Responses, coded into 33 categories, were classified as either abstract or specific and as either autonomous or social. These 2 dichotomies were more independent in Seoul than in New York. The New York sample included Asian American whose spontaneous social identities differed. They either never listed ethnicity-nationality on the TST, or listed it once or twice. Unidentified Asian Americans' self-concepts resembled Euro-Americans' self-concepts, and twice identified Asian Americans' self-concepts resembled Koreans' self-concepts, in both abstractness-specificity and autonomy-sociality. Differential acculturation did not account for these results. Implications for social identity, self-categorization, and acculturation theory are discussed.
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