Self and identity: personal, social, and symbolic/

Yoshihisa, Kashima

Self and identity: personal, social, and symbolic/ Kashima Yoshihisa - Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002. - 263 p.

PART I: THEORIES OF THE MIND
1. Self and Identity: What Is the Conception of the Person
Assumed in the Current Literature?
Margaret Foddy and Yoshihisa Kashima
2. Connectionism and Self: Distributed Representational
Systems and Their Implications for Self and Identity
Michael S. Humphreys and Yoshihisa Kashima
PART II: PERSONAL PROCESSES
3. Self-Control: A Limited Yet Renewable Resource
Jean M. Twenge and Roy F. Baumeister
4. The Dialogical Self: One Person, Different Stories
Hubert J. M. Hermans
PART III: SOCIAL PROCESSES
5. Do Others Bring Out the Worst in Narcissists?:
The "Others Exist for Me" Illusion
Constantine Sedikides, W. Keith Campbell, Glenn
D. Feeder, Andrew J. Elliot, and Aiden P. Gregg
6. Roles, Identities, and Emotions: Parallel Processing
and the Production of Mixed Emotions
Lynn Sniith-Lovin
7. Challenging the Primacy of the Personal Self: The Case
for Depersonalized Self-Conception
Rina S. Onorato and John C. Turner
PART IV; SYMBOLIC PROCESSES
8. Time and Self: The Historical Construction of the Self
Yoshihisa Kashinia and Margaret Foddy
9. Culture and Self: A Cultural Dynamical Analysis
Yoshihisa Kashima
PART V: CONCLUSION
10. Self and Identity in Historical/Sociocultural Context:
"Perspectives on Selfhood" Revisited
M. Brewster Smith
Concluding Comments
Yoshihisa Kashima. Margaret Foddy, and
Michael J. Platow

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