What We Can Learn About Emotion by Talking With the Hadza

Author:

Hoemann Katie1ORCID,Gendron Maria2,Crittenden Alyssa N.3,Mangola Shani Msafiri45,Endeko Endeko S.6,Dussault Èvelyne1,Barrett Lisa Feldman789,Mesquita Batja1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, KU Leuven

2. Department of Psychology, Yale University

3. Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada Las Vegas

4. The Law School of Tanzania

5. Olanakwe Community Fund, Mang’ola, Tanzania

6. Ujamaa Community Resource Team, Arusha, Tanzania

7. Department of Psychology, Northeastern University

8. Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts

9. Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts

Abstract

Emotions are often thought of as internal mental states centering on individuals’ subjective feelings and evaluations. This understanding is consistent with studies of emotion narratives, or the descriptions people give for experienced events that they regard as emotions. Yet these studies, and contemporary psychology more generally, often rely on observations of educated Europeans and European Americans, constraining psychological theory and methods. In this article, we present observations from an inductive, qualitative analysis of interviews conducted with the Hadza, a community of small-scale hunter-gatherers in Tanzania, and juxtapose them with a set of interviews conducted with Americans from North Carolina. Although North Carolina event descriptions largely conformed to the assumptions of eurocentric psychological theory, Hadza descriptions foregrounded action and bodily sensations, the physical environment, immediate needs, and the experiences of social others. These observations suggest that subjective feelings and internal mental states may not be the organizing principle of emotion the world around. Qualitative analysis of emotion narratives from outside of a U.S. (and western) cultural context has the potential to uncover additional diversity in meaning-making, offering a descriptive foundation on which to build a more robust and inclusive science of emotion.

Funder

Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences

H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

elizabeth r koch foundation

Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences

National Institute of Mental Health

National Cancer Institute

H2020 European Research Council

Wake Forest Science Fund 1999

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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