Constructivist models of mind, contemporary psychoanalysis, and tehe development of culture theory.

Researchers in a number of fields, including contemporary psychoanalysis, are contributing to the development of a dynamic model of mind that acknowledges the contributions of biology and social experience to the construction of human consciousness and subjectivity. In this paper, I examine this eme...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hollan, Douglas
Format: Analitica de revista
Language:English
Published: Arlington American Antropological Association 2000
Subjects:

MARC

LEADER 00000cab a2200000 a 4500
001 024553
003 UAHC_CL
005 20170810105639.0
008 010809b xx j 000 1 eng
952 |0 0  |1 0  |4 0  |6 AM___ANTHROPOL_03_00_000000000000000  |7 0  |8 General  |9 49080  |a BC  |b BC  |c General  |d 2017-08-03  |l 0  |o AM. ANTHROPOL.-03/00  |p FICTICIO166  |r 2019-01-08 00:00:00  |t 1  |w 2017-08-03  |y REVA 
999 |c 24553  |d 24553 
040 |a UAHC_CL  |c UAHC_CL  |d UAHC_CL 
100 1 |a Hollan, Douglas 
245 1 0 |a Constructivist models of mind, contemporary psychoanalysis, and tehe development of culture theory. 
260 |a Arlington  |b American Antropological Association  |c 2000 
500 |a En: American Anthropologist. -- Vol. 102 No. 3 (Septiembre 2000), pp. 538-550. ISSN 00027294 
520 |a Researchers in a number of fields, including contemporary psychoanalysis, are contributing to the development of a dynamic model of mind that acknowledges the contributions of biology and social experience to the construction of human consciousness and subjectivity. In this paper, I examine this emerging model of mind and I discuss its implications for the development of Culture theory. I argue that theories of culture must reflect the fluidity and complexity of the psychological states that underlie the culture process, and I suggest that even highly conventional models of action, thought, and feeling are rarely, if ever, internalized, appropriated, or reproduced without some degree of modification, refashioning, and personalization. I propose person-centered ethnography as one of the methods by which we can explore the complex relations among culture, mind, and behavior 
650 4 |a ETNOGRAFIA 
650 4 |a PSICOANALISIS 
650 4 |a CULTURA  |x TEORIA 
773 0 |t American anthropologist  |w 024522 
900 |a AM. ANTHROPOL.-03/00 
942 |c REVA  |2 ddc