Self and Agency in Context: Ecologies of Abundance and Scarcity

Author:

Adams Glenn1,Bruckmüller Susanne2,Decker Stephanie3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Kansas

2. Department of Psychology, University of Exeter, United Kingdom

3. Department of Sociology, University of Kansas

Abstract

This work considers sociocultural foundations of self and agency in material affordances associated with affluence and poverty. We first review work that links independent self-construal and disjoint agency to material abundance. We then report an experiment among students at North American ( n = 52) and West African ( n = 60) universities, in which we manipulated abundance and scarcity concepts and assessed effects on a pronoun-selection measure of self-construal. Participants in the North American setting and abundance condition selected first-person pronouns (particularly, I and me) with greater frequency than did participants in the West African setting and scarcity condition. In contrast to modernity accounts, which propose that individualism promotes prosperity, results are consistent with the alternative account: that abundance can promote independent or disjoint varieties of self and agency. Discussion focuses on the distinction between cultural and structural varieties of sociocultural influence and contributions of international perspectives to psychological science.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference81 articles.

1. Self and Identity in African Studies

2. Adams, G. & Markus, H. R. (2004). Toward a conception of culture suitable for a Social Psychology of Culture. In M. Schaller & C. S. Crandall (Eds.), The psychological foundations of culture (pp. 335–360). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

3. The cultural grounding of personal relationship: Friendship in North American and West African worlds

4. Adams, G., Salter, P. S., Pickett, K. M., Kurtiş, T. & Phillips, N. L. (2010). Behavior as mind-in-context: A cultural psychology analysis of “paranoid” suspicion. In L. F. Barrett, B. Mesquita, & E. Smith (Eds.), The mind in context (pp. 277–306). New York, NY: Guilford.

5. The Cultural Grounding of Personal Relationship: Enemyship in North American and West African Worlds.

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