Heidi Keller / H. Poortinga / Axel Schölmerich (eds.)
Between Culture and Biology
Perspectives on Ontogenetic Development
Herausgeber: Butterworth, George; Scholmerich, Axel; Keller, Heidi
Heidi Keller / H. Poortinga / Axel Schölmerich (eds.)
Between Culture and Biology
Perspectives on Ontogenetic Development
Herausgeber: Butterworth, George; Scholmerich, Axel; Keller, Heidi
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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: 30. Juni 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780521794527
- ISBN-10: 0521794528
- Artikelnr.: 21886138
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780521794527
- ISBN-10: 0521794528
- Artikelnr.: 21886138
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.