Idol Worship in Chinese Society

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A01=Chau-kiu Cheung
A01=Xiaodong Yue
Addiction
attachment and intimacy research
Author_Chau-kiu Cheung
Author_Xiaodong Yue
Category=JBCC1
Category=JMC
Category=JMH
Category=JMS
Celebrity Worship
Chau-kiu Cheung
China
Chinese popular culture
Chinese societies
Choosing Role Models
Compensation Thesis
contemporary idolisation in China
Dismissive Attachment
Dismissive Attachment Styles
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fan Club Members
Fandom
Fearful Attachment
Government's Promotional Efforts
hexagonal model
High Interfactor Correlations
Identification- Emulation
Idol Faming
Idol Personalizing
Idol Romanticizing
Idol Worship
Idolatry
Idolizing
Intimacy
Li Yuchun
Mainland Student
moral development
moral development theory
Moratorium Adolescents
Negative Relationships
personality factors
Pop Stars
Preoccupied Attachment
psychological theories
psychosocial analysis
Religiosity
Revise Neo Personality Inventory
Secure Attachment
Secure Attachment Style
Self-efficacy
self-identity formation
Star Idols
Vice Versa
Wei Jie
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415788861
  • Weight: 510g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book introduces psychosocial studies of idol worship in Chinese societies. It reviews how idol worship is perceived in Chinese culture, history, and philosophy as well as how it differs from the concept of celebrity worship that is more dominant in Western literature. Using a pioneering hexagonal model of idol worship, this book explains how idol worship is affected by various demographic and dispositional variables as well as the cognitive and social functions of idols and idol worship. Finally, it discusses idol worship from a contemporary Chinese perspective, including emotional, interpersonal, and social learning aspects, and ends with a discussion of moral development perspective.

Xiaodong Yue 岳曉東 is assistant dean, School of Graduate Studies, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences and associate professor, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at City University of Hong Kong. He earned his BA degree in English language and literature at Beijing Second Foreign Languages Institute in 1982, his MA degree in education from Tufts University in 1987, and his EdD degree in psychology from Harvard University in 1993. He has taught psychology courses at the Department of Educational Psychology of Chinese University of Hong Kong (1993–1996) and at the Department of Applied Social Sciences of City University of Hong Kong (since 1997). He has published widely on issues of creativity, humor, resilience, and adolescent idol worship in Chinese society. He is an adjunct professor of over 20 universities in China as well as an ad hoc reviewer of ten international journals of psychology and education around the world. He is also the founding chair of the Division of Counseling Psychology of Hong Kong Psychological Society. He has been invited to give keynote addresses at various conferences in China and around world. (Contact him at ssxdyue@cityu.edu.hk)

Chau-kiu Cheung is associate professor, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at City University of Hong Kong. He has recently published on the topics of emerging adulthood, child abuse, resilience, character education, moral development, peer influence, and class mobility. His current research addresses issues of idolatry, violence, distress, career, and prosociality. (Contact him at ssjacky@cityu.edu.hk)

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