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Why Do Men Barbecue?: Recipes for Cultural Psychology - Hardcover

 
9780674010574: Why Do Men Barbecue?: Recipes for Cultural Psychology
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Why do American children sleep alone instead of with their parents? Why do middle-aged Western women yearn for youth, while young wives in India look forward to being middle-aged? In these essays, one of the advocates of cultural psychology reminds us that cultural differences in mental life lie at the heart of any understanding of the human condition. Drawing on ethnographic studies of the distinctive modes of psychological functioning in communities around the world, Richard Shweder explores ethnic and cultural differences in ideals of gender, in the life of the emotions, in conceptions of mature adulthood and the stages of life, and in moral judgements about right and wrong. Shweder, a cultural pluralist, dares readers to broaden their own conceptions of what is good, true, beautiful and efficient and to take a closer look at specific cultural practices - parent/child co-sleeping, arranged marriage, male and female genital modifications - that we may initially find alien or disturbing. He invites is to reject both radical relativism (the view that whatever is, is OK) and imperial visions of universal progressive cultural development (for example, the idea that "the West is best") and to engage in more deeply informed cultural critique. The knowable world, Shweder observes, is incomplete if seen from any one point of view, incoherent if seen from all points of view at once, and empty if seen from nowhere in particular. This work strives for the "view from manywheres" in a culturally diverse yet interdependent world.

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Shweder's "recipes" are lucid, timely investigations of suffering, the domestic life of Hindu women, the sleeping arrangements parents of different nationalities and classes institute with their children, and female genital mutilation--to name a few. relativist bromides demanding 'tolerance.' Whether writing about the lives of Hindu women in rural India, comparing the family sleeping arrangements of different societies, or challenging feminist criticisms of female genital surgery in sub-Saharan Africa, Shweder describes the results of his ethnography of difference with elegance and wit. He avoids the dehumanizing fetishism of difference that characterizes all too much contemporary social science and social theory, and resists familiar relativist bromides demanding 'tolerance.'--Michele M. Moody-Adams"Times Literary Supplement" (09/12/2003)
About the Author:
RICHARD A. SHWEDER, a cultural anthropologist, is the William Claude Reavis Professor of Human Development, University of Chicago, and author of Thinking through Cultures (Harvard).

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  • PublisherHarvard University Press
  • Publication date2003
  • ISBN 10 0674010574
  • ISBN 13 9780674010574
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages448
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Shweder, Richard A.
Published by Harvard University Press (2003)
ISBN 10: 0674010574 ISBN 13: 9780674010574
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