Universalism without uniformity: explorations in mind and culture
Introduction: universalism without uniformity /Usha Menon and Julia Cassaniti --Breaking down barriers through the study of culture in the study of mind.Challenging developmental doctrines through cross-cultural research /Robert A. Levine ;How cultural psychology can help us see "divinity" in a secular world /Jonathan Haidt and Paul Rozin --Beyond universal taxonomic frameworks in cultural social psychology /Joan G. Miller --From value to lifeworld /Roy D'Andrade --Psychological processes across culture: one mind, many mentalities. Emotion: a multiplicity of feeling."Kama muta" or "being moved by love": a bootstrapping approach to the ontology and epistemology of an emotion /Alan P. Fiske, Thomas Schubert, and Beate Seibt ;Unsettling basic states: new directions in the cross-cultural study of emotion /Julia Cassaniti ;Rasa and the cultural shaping of human consciousness /Usha Menon -- Intersubjectivity: social trust, interpersonal attachment, and agency. The socialization of social trust: cultural pluralism in understanding attachment and trust in children /Thomas S. Weisner ;An attachment-theoretical approach to religious cognition /Charles W. Nuckolls -- Implications of psychological pluralism for a multicultural world: why can't we all just get along? Challenges to the modern nation-state: globalization's impact on morality, identity, and the person.Acculturation, assimilation, and the "view from manywheres" in the Hmong diaspora /Jacob R. Hickman ;Cultural pluralism and liberalism /Pinky Hota ;Equality, not special protection: multiculturalism, feminism, and female circumcision in Western liberal democracies /Fuambai Ahmadu --Mental health: variations in healthy minds across cultures.Cultural psychology and the globalization of Western psychiatric practices /Randall Horton ;Toward a cultural psychology of trauma and trauma-related disorders /Byron Good and Mary-Jo Delvecchio Good ;The risky cartography of drawing moral maps: with special reference to economic inequality and sex-selective abortion /Richard A. Shweder.