Outside the “Cultural Binary”: Understanding Why Latin American Collectivist Societies Foster Independent Selves

Author:

Krys Kuba12ORCID,Vignoles Vivian L.3,de Almeida Igor4ORCID,Uchida Yukiko2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences

2. Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University

3. School of Psychology, University of Sussex

4. Institute of Liberal Arts, Otemon Gakuin University

Abstract

Cultural psychologists often treat binary contrasts of West versus East, individualism versus collectivism, and independent versus interdependent self-construal as interchangeable, thus assuming that collectivist societies promote interdependent rather than independent models of selfhood. At odds with this assumption, existing data indicate that Latin American societies emphasize collectivist values at least as strongly as Confucian East Asian societies, but they emphasize most forms of independent self-construal at least as strongly as Western societies. We argue that these seemingly “anomalous” findings can be explained by societal differences in modes of subsistence (herding vs. rice farming), colonial histories (frontier settlement), cultural heterogeneity, religious heritage, and societal organization (relational mobility, loose norms, honor logic) and that they cohere with other indices of contemporary psychological culture. We conclude that the common view linking collectivist values with interdependent self-construal needs revision. Global cultures are diverse, and researchers should pay more attention to societies beyond “the West” and East Asia. Our contribution concurrently illustrates the value of learning from unexpected results and the crucial importance of exploratory research in psychological science.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Narodowe Centrum Nauki

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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