Heidi Keller / H. Poortinga / Axel Schölmerich (eds.)
Between Culture and Biology
Herausgeber: Keller, Heidi; Schölmerich, Axel; Poortinga, Ype H.
Heidi Keller / H. Poortinga / Axel Schölmerich (eds.)
Between Culture and Biology
Herausgeber: Keller, Heidi; Schölmerich, Axel; Poortinga, Ype H.
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Between Culture and Biology integrates both the biological and the cultural perspectives on ontogenetic development.
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Between Culture and Biology integrates both the biological and the cultural perspectives on ontogenetic development.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 877g
- ISBN-13: 9780521791205
- ISBN-10: 0521791200
- Artikelnr.: 29337052
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 877g
- ISBN-13: 9780521791205
- ISBN-10: 0521791200
- Artikelnr.: 29337052
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
HEIDI KELLER is Professor of Psychology and Head of the Department on Culture and Development at the University of Osnabrück, Germany.
Introduction Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel Schölmerich; Part I.
Setting the Scene: 1. Culture, biology and development across history
Gustav Jahoda; 2. Comparative developmental perspectives on culture: the
great apes Anne E. Russon; 3. The mutual definition of culture and biology
in development Patricia M. Greenfield; Part II. Perspectives on Development
Informed by Culture: 4. Indian parents' ethnotheories as reflections of the
Hindu scheme of child and human development T. S. Saraswathi and Hema
Ganapathy; 5. Indigenous conceptions of childhood development and social
realities in Southern Africa Roderick Fulata Zimba; 6. The myth of lurking
chaos Ernst E. Boesch; 7. Integrating cultural psychological and biological
perspectives in understanding child development Joan G. Miller; Part III.
Perspectives on development drawing from the universal and the specific: 8.
Between individuals and culture: Individuals' evaluations of exclusion from
social groups Melanie Killen, Heidi McGlothlin and Jennie Lee-Kim; 9.
Biology, culture and child rearing: the development of social motives
Hans-Joachim Kornadt; Part IV. Perspectives on Development Informed by
Evolutionary Thinking: 10. Development as the interface between biology and
culture: a conceptualisation of early ontogenetic experiences Heidi Keller;
11. Integrating evolution, culture and developmental psychology: explaining
caregiver-infant proximity and responsiveness in Central Africa and the
United States of America Barry S. Hewlett and Michael E. Lamb; 12. Shame
across cultures: the evolution, ontogeny, and function of a 'moral emotion'
Michael J. Casimir and Michael Schnegg; Part V. Metaperspectives: 13.
Culture and development Michael Cole; Behaviour-culture relationships and
ontogenetic development Ype H. Poortinga and Karel Soudijn; 15. Paradigms
revisited: from incommensurability to respected complementarity Lutz H.
Eckensberger; 16. Conceptions of ontogenetic development: integrating and
demarcating perspectives Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel
Schölmerich.
Setting the Scene: 1. Culture, biology and development across history
Gustav Jahoda; 2. Comparative developmental perspectives on culture: the
great apes Anne E. Russon; 3. The mutual definition of culture and biology
in development Patricia M. Greenfield; Part II. Perspectives on Development
Informed by Culture: 4. Indian parents' ethnotheories as reflections of the
Hindu scheme of child and human development T. S. Saraswathi and Hema
Ganapathy; 5. Indigenous conceptions of childhood development and social
realities in Southern Africa Roderick Fulata Zimba; 6. The myth of lurking
chaos Ernst E. Boesch; 7. Integrating cultural psychological and biological
perspectives in understanding child development Joan G. Miller; Part III.
Perspectives on development drawing from the universal and the specific: 8.
Between individuals and culture: Individuals' evaluations of exclusion from
social groups Melanie Killen, Heidi McGlothlin and Jennie Lee-Kim; 9.
Biology, culture and child rearing: the development of social motives
Hans-Joachim Kornadt; Part IV. Perspectives on Development Informed by
Evolutionary Thinking: 10. Development as the interface between biology and
culture: a conceptualisation of early ontogenetic experiences Heidi Keller;
11. Integrating evolution, culture and developmental psychology: explaining
caregiver-infant proximity and responsiveness in Central Africa and the
United States of America Barry S. Hewlett and Michael E. Lamb; 12. Shame
across cultures: the evolution, ontogeny, and function of a 'moral emotion'
Michael J. Casimir and Michael Schnegg; Part V. Metaperspectives: 13.
Culture and development Michael Cole; Behaviour-culture relationships and
ontogenetic development Ype H. Poortinga and Karel Soudijn; 15. Paradigms
revisited: from incommensurability to respected complementarity Lutz H.
Eckensberger; 16. Conceptions of ontogenetic development: integrating and
demarcating perspectives Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel
Schölmerich.
Introduction Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel Schölmerich; Part I.
Setting the Scene: 1. Culture, biology and development across history
Gustav Jahoda; 2. Comparative developmental perspectives on culture: the
great apes Anne E. Russon; 3. The mutual definition of culture and biology
in development Patricia M. Greenfield; Part II. Perspectives on Development
Informed by Culture: 4. Indian parents' ethnotheories as reflections of the
Hindu scheme of child and human development T. S. Saraswathi and Hema
Ganapathy; 5. Indigenous conceptions of childhood development and social
realities in Southern Africa Roderick Fulata Zimba; 6. The myth of lurking
chaos Ernst E. Boesch; 7. Integrating cultural psychological and biological
perspectives in understanding child development Joan G. Miller; Part III.
Perspectives on development drawing from the universal and the specific: 8.
Between individuals and culture: Individuals' evaluations of exclusion from
social groups Melanie Killen, Heidi McGlothlin and Jennie Lee-Kim; 9.
Biology, culture and child rearing: the development of social motives
Hans-Joachim Kornadt; Part IV. Perspectives on Development Informed by
Evolutionary Thinking: 10. Development as the interface between biology and
culture: a conceptualisation of early ontogenetic experiences Heidi Keller;
11. Integrating evolution, culture and developmental psychology: explaining
caregiver-infant proximity and responsiveness in Central Africa and the
United States of America Barry S. Hewlett and Michael E. Lamb; 12. Shame
across cultures: the evolution, ontogeny, and function of a 'moral emotion'
Michael J. Casimir and Michael Schnegg; Part V. Metaperspectives: 13.
Culture and development Michael Cole; Behaviour-culture relationships and
ontogenetic development Ype H. Poortinga and Karel Soudijn; 15. Paradigms
revisited: from incommensurability to respected complementarity Lutz H.
Eckensberger; 16. Conceptions of ontogenetic development: integrating and
demarcating perspectives Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel
Schölmerich.
Setting the Scene: 1. Culture, biology and development across history
Gustav Jahoda; 2. Comparative developmental perspectives on culture: the
great apes Anne E. Russon; 3. The mutual definition of culture and biology
in development Patricia M. Greenfield; Part II. Perspectives on Development
Informed by Culture: 4. Indian parents' ethnotheories as reflections of the
Hindu scheme of child and human development T. S. Saraswathi and Hema
Ganapathy; 5. Indigenous conceptions of childhood development and social
realities in Southern Africa Roderick Fulata Zimba; 6. The myth of lurking
chaos Ernst E. Boesch; 7. Integrating cultural psychological and biological
perspectives in understanding child development Joan G. Miller; Part III.
Perspectives on development drawing from the universal and the specific: 8.
Between individuals and culture: Individuals' evaluations of exclusion from
social groups Melanie Killen, Heidi McGlothlin and Jennie Lee-Kim; 9.
Biology, culture and child rearing: the development of social motives
Hans-Joachim Kornadt; Part IV. Perspectives on Development Informed by
Evolutionary Thinking: 10. Development as the interface between biology and
culture: a conceptualisation of early ontogenetic experiences Heidi Keller;
11. Integrating evolution, culture and developmental psychology: explaining
caregiver-infant proximity and responsiveness in Central Africa and the
United States of America Barry S. Hewlett and Michael E. Lamb; 12. Shame
across cultures: the evolution, ontogeny, and function of a 'moral emotion'
Michael J. Casimir and Michael Schnegg; Part V. Metaperspectives: 13.
Culture and development Michael Cole; Behaviour-culture relationships and
ontogenetic development Ype H. Poortinga and Karel Soudijn; 15. Paradigms
revisited: from incommensurability to respected complementarity Lutz H.
Eckensberger; 16. Conceptions of ontogenetic development: integrating and
demarcating perspectives Heidi Keller, Ype H. Poortinga and Axel
Schölmerich.