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Cultivating Minds: Identity as Meaning-making Practice

✍ Scribed by Urs Fuhrer


Year
2004
Tongue
English
Leaves
185
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Cultivating Minds is a ground-breaking unification of the ideas of Simmel and contemporary perspectives in cultural psychology. The theoretical framework proposed is based on an integration of core philosophical, sociological, and psychological ideas from the intellectual traditions of pragmatism, socioculturalism, constructivism, and transactionalism. The primary focus of this work is on cultivation as a metaphor for identity formation. According to this idea, each and every human agent is an active producer of its own development and identity. The cultivation model expands existing sociocultural perspectives by elaborating further how an individual's cultivation of the sociocultural environment is mediated through artefacts and objects, a concept exemplified by the identity processes demonstrated by graffiti artists. The idea of the cultured mind has profound implications not only for cultural psychology but also for theories of identity and, of course, development. It affects the way we understand the formation of the self and, in the end, the growth of the person. The result is a theory which captures the convergence between identity, culture and development in new and far-reaching ways.

✦ Table of Contents


Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
List of figures and tables......Page 8
Foreword by......Page 10
Preface......Page 12
Acknowledgements......Page 18
Identity and the significance of meaning......Page 20
The semiotic mediation of the self......Page 22
The self as act......Page 37
Identity through culture......Page 56
The rediscovery of Georg Simmel's work on culture......Page 58
Simmelian cultivation: the mutuality of person and culture......Page 75
The cultivating minds paradigm......Page 96
Identity, culture, and development under transactional issues......Page 98
Cultivating meanings as mediating possibilities for the self......Page 111
Behavior settings as media for children's cultivation......Page 132
The writing on the wall: cultural piracy to struggle with the self......Page 149
Coda......Page 166
Bibliography......Page 172
Index......Page 182


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