TY - JOUR
T1 - Cultural dimensions, gender, and the nature of self-concept
T2 - A fourteen-country study
AU - Watkins, David
AU - Akande, Adebowale
AU - Fleming, James
AU - Ismail, Maznah
AU - Lefner, Kent
AU - Regmi, Murari
AU - Watson, Sue
AU - Yu, Jiayuan
AU - Adair, John
AU - Cheng, Christopher
AU - Gerong, Andres
AU - McInerney, Dennis
AU - Mpofu, Elias
AU - Singh-Sengupta, Sunita
AU - Wondimu, Habtamu
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Ratings of the importance of and satisfaction with 20 areas of the self were obtained from 3604 first or second year social science undergraduates from 14 countries (15 cultures). Factor analysis at the culture by gender level supported four factors for both sets of ratings. The resulting factor scores were analyzed for mean differences according to the cultural dimension of Individualism-Collectivism by Gender and by correlations with other cultural dimenions and economic indicators. It was found that participants from the 10 collectivist cultures placed greater salience for their self-concepts on "family values" than did those from the individualist cultures. However, this cultural difference was not found for "social relationships". The expected gender differences, with females valuing "family values" and "social relationships" more highly, were found only for the individualist countries. The findings indicate that there may be a strong cultural level interaction effect between gender and Individualism-Collectivism on the nature of self-conceptions, and that the "family" and "social" aspects of self-concept in collectivist countries need to be considered separately.
AB - Ratings of the importance of and satisfaction with 20 areas of the self were obtained from 3604 first or second year social science undergraduates from 14 countries (15 cultures). Factor analysis at the culture by gender level supported four factors for both sets of ratings. The resulting factor scores were analyzed for mean differences according to the cultural dimension of Individualism-Collectivism by Gender and by correlations with other cultural dimenions and economic indicators. It was found that participants from the 10 collectivist cultures placed greater salience for their self-concepts on "family values" than did those from the individualist cultures. However, this cultural difference was not found for "social relationships". The expected gender differences, with females valuing "family values" and "social relationships" more highly, were found only for the individualist countries. The findings indicate that there may be a strong cultural level interaction effect between gender and Individualism-Collectivism on the nature of self-conceptions, and that the "family" and "social" aspects of self-concept in collectivist countries need to be considered separately.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0032219848&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/002075998400583
DO - 10.1080/002075998400583
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0032219848
SN - 0020-7594
VL - 33
SP - 17
EP - 31
JO - International Journal of Psychology
JF - International Journal of Psychology
IS - 1
ER -