2012
DOI: 10.5502/ijw.v2.i4.5
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Personal or interpersonal construal of happiness: A cultural psychological perspective

Abstract: Cultural psychological research reveals considerable variation in how people construe happiness and experience subjective wellbeing. This paper identified substantial cultural differences in (1) meanings of happiness, (2) predictors of happiness, and (3) how social changes such as globalization are related to happiness. In European-American cultural contexts, happiness is construed as including experience of a highly desirable and positive emotional state defined in terms of a high arousal state such as excite… Show more

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Cited by 150 publications
(120 citation statements)
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“…Anti-realism comes in different 'strengths': strong constructionism holds that all aspects of human experience are entirely culturally created (and thus are particular to the specific cultural nexus in which they emerge), which obviously aligns with Berry et al's notion of extreme relativism; conversely, weak versions claim only that aspects of human experience are culturally shaped (but may be moulded from universal human needs and qualities), which is reflective of Berry et al's concept of moderate relativism. Either way, research of this relativising variety looks specifically at how people in different cultures may have significant differences concerning wellbeing, from the way it is conceptualised and defined (Joshanloo, 2014), to how it is experienced (Uchida & Ogihara, 2012) and reported (Oishi, 2010). Such cultural differences have been explored at various levels of scale.…”
Section: Relativismmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Anti-realism comes in different 'strengths': strong constructionism holds that all aspects of human experience are entirely culturally created (and thus are particular to the specific cultural nexus in which they emerge), which obviously aligns with Berry et al's notion of extreme relativism; conversely, weak versions claim only that aspects of human experience are culturally shaped (but may be moulded from universal human needs and qualities), which is reflective of Berry et al's concept of moderate relativism. Either way, research of this relativising variety looks specifically at how people in different cultures may have significant differences concerning wellbeing, from the way it is conceptualised and defined (Joshanloo, 2014), to how it is experienced (Uchida & Ogihara, 2012) and reported (Oishi, 2010). Such cultural differences have been explored at various levels of scale.…”
Section: Relativismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In PP, this approach has arguably been less prevalent than the universalising perspective, since the field has tended to be dominated by more conventional epistemological perspectives (such as positivism). However, we are starting to see emergent efforts in the field to investigate variation in the way different cultures relate to happiness and wellbeing, including in terms of how these are defined (Joshanloo, 2014), experienced (Uchida & Ogihara, 2012) and reported (Oishi, 2010). Thus, works cited here as examples of this perspective pay close attention to cultural differences, and tend to argue that people's experiences of wellbeing, and of life more broadly, are strongly constituted by their cultural context.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has physical, psychological, spiritual, and social dimensions that are experienced within the domains of family, community, and societal life (LaPlaca, McNaught, & Knight, 2013). Individuals actively cultivate a sense of subjective wellbeing within these social contexts (Uchida & Ogihara, 2012). These interrelated dimensions of wellbeing include a cognitive sense of life satisfaction and the emotional experience of happiness expressed in the presence of positive and a lack of negative feelings toward oneself (Angner, 2011;Dodge, Daly, Huyton, & Sanders, 2012).…”
Section: Subjective Wellbeing and Life Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the level of satisfaction with one's life in individualistic cultures is, to a greater extent, determined by the individual's emotions and moods, while in collectivistic cultures, the level of satisfaction with one's life is determined by the individual's social life [58,59]. Since most well-being measures are designed in individualistic Western societies, the meaning of well-being in other cultures may not be properly captured [60]. Additionally, there may be technical biases due to culture-specific social norms about a condition or circumstance, such as infertility, that may affect the individual's responses on questions regarding this condition and the individual's well-being [7,14].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%