Emerging Perspectives on Self and Identity

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Affiliative Responses
Appearance Rigidity
Attributionally Ambiguous
Biracial Black
Biracial Identity
Biracial Individuals
Biracial Participants
Biracial Populations
Category=JMH
Chronic
Chronic Accessibility
Col
Collectivistic Cultural Backgrounds
Entertainment Narratives
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fake Smiles
gender identity development
Greater Self-complexity
Held
identity
identity formation
Identity Orientation
Interdependent Self-construal
Interracial Contexts
Lower Self-complexity
narrative psychology
psychological perspectives on self-concept
psychology
psychology of the self
Relational Identity Orientation
Self and Identity
self-awareness
self-concept
self-esteem
self-evaluation
self-reference
self-regulation theory
Self-related Processes
social cognition
social comparison
social comparison processes
Social Identity Threat
social perception
social psychology
Trait Judgments
universal stories
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367776954
  • Weight: 240g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The broad concept of the self is fundamental to psychology, serving as an anchor by which we perceive and make sense of the world as well as how we relate to and think about others. This book develops creative points of view of the self which have not previously been reviewed, creating a web of interconnected concepts under the umbrella of the self.

The various contributions to this book discuss these concepts, such as self-regulation, self-concept, self-esteem, self-awareness, social comparison, and self-reference. All of them are related to the self, and all would justify a review of their own, yet none of them have up to this point. As a whole, the book develops these new, creative points of view of the self—the integral (primary) component of our experience as social beings.

Offering numerous perspectives on various aspects of the self which can foster new thinking and research, this timely and important book makes suggestions for future research that will spur additional lines of work by readers. This book was originally published as a special issue of Self and Identity.

Michael J. Bernstein is an Associate Professor of Social Psychology in the Psychological and Social Sciences interdisciplinary program at Penn State University Abington, USA. His primary area of research focuses on social belonging and the myriad cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses that follow if that sense of belonging is threatened.

Elizabeth L. Haines is a Full Professor of Social Psychology in the Psychology Department at William Paterson University, USA. Her primary area of research is on social and self-perception in social categorization; and the implicit biases we hold for groups, self, and other.