Cultural Bases for Self-Evaluation: Seeing Oneself Positively in Different Cultural Contexts

Date

2014

Authors

Becker, M.
Vignoles, V. L.
Owe, E.
Easterbrook, M. J.
Brown, R.
Smith, P. B.
Bond, M. H.
Regalia, C.
Manzi, C.
Brambilla, M.

Editor(s)

Advisor

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

Source Title

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Print ISSN

0146-1672

Electronic ISSN

Publisher

SAGE Publications Inc.
SAGE

Volume

40

Issue

5

Pages

657 - 675

Language

English

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Series

Abstract

Several theories propose that self-esteem, or positive self-regard, results from fulfilling the value priorities of one's surrounding culture. Yet, surprisingly little evidence exists for this assertion, and theories differ about whether individuals must personally endorse the value priorities involved. We compared the influence of four bases for self-evaluation (controlling one's life, doing one's duty, benefitting others, achieving social status) among 4,852 adolescents across 20 cultural samples, using an implicit, within-person measurement technique to avoid cultural response biases. Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses showed that participants generally derived feelings of self-esteem from all four bases, but especially from those that were most consistent with the value priorities of others in their cultural context. Multilevel analyses confirmed that the bases of positive self-regard are sustained collectively: They are predictably moderated by culturally normative values but show little systematic variation with personally endorsed values. © 2014 by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

Course

Other identifiers

Book Title

Citation