|
Psychology and Psychotechnics
Reference:
Shazhinbatyn, A.
Ethnical Pluralism: Conflict and Adaptation
// Psychology and Psychotechnics.
2011. ¹ 8.
P. 69-90.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=58712
Shazhinbatyn, A. Ethnical Pluralism: Conflict and Adaptation
Abstract:
The feeling of community origin, religion, values, way of survival, i.e. some ‘common ground’, plays
an important role in the process of unifying people into groups which is characterized by internal self-identification.
Growing as a part of one social group, community of verbal and non-verbal communications allow
people to establish understandable adaptation mechanisms that drastically reduce confrontation and conf
licts.
Keywords:
philosophy, ethnicity, pluralism, conf lict, adaptation, confrontation, development, culture, stratification, system.
References
1. De Vos G.A. Conflict, Dominance and Exploitation in Human Systems of Social Segregation: Some Theoretical Perspectives from the Study of Personality and Culture // Conflicts in Society. London, 1966.
2. De Vos G.A., Wagatsuma H. Japan`s Invisible Race: Caste and Culture in Personality. Berkeley, 1967.
3. Erikson E.H. Identity, Youth and Crisis. New York, 1968.
4. Foster G. Peasant Society and the Limited Good // American Anthropologist. 1967.
5. Glaser N., Moynlhen D.P. Beyond the Melting Pot. Cambridge (Mass.), 1963.
6. Goffman E. Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity. Prentice Hall, 1963.
7. Hagen E.E. On the Theory of Social Change. Illionois, 1962.
8. Kardiner A., Ovesey L. The Mark of Oppression. New York, 1962.
9. Lanternari V. The Religions of the Oppressed: A Study of Modern Messianic Cults. New York, 1963.
10. Lewis O. Five Families. New York, 1959.
11. Lipset S.M., Bendix R. Social Mobility in Industrial Society. Berkeley, 1959.
12. Mead G.H. The I and Me // Mind, Self and Society. Chicago, 1934.
13. Nakane Ch. Japanese Society. London, 1971.
14. Totten G., Wagatsuma H. Emancipation: Growth and Transformation of a Political Movment // Japan`s Japan`s Invisible Race: Caste and Culture in Personality. Berkeley, 1967
|