Early Reminiscing in Cultural Contexts: Cultural Models, Maternal Reminiscing Styles, and Children's Memories

Autor(en): Schroeder, Lisa
Keller, Heidi
Kaertner, Joscha
Kleis, Astrid
Abels, Monika
Yovsi, Relindis D.
Chaudhary, Nandita
Jensen, Henning
Papaligoura, Zaira
Stichwörter: AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY; AUTONOMY SUPPORT; CHINESE; CONSTRUCTION; CONVERSATIONS; EUROPEAN-AMERICAN; Psychology; Psychology, Developmental; Psychology, Experimental; SELF; SOCIALIZATION; STORIES; TALK
Erscheinungsdatum: 2013
Herausgeber: ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Journal: JOURNAL OF COGNITION AND DEVELOPMENT
Volumen: 14
Ausgabe: 1
Startseite: 10
Seitenende: 34
Zusammenfassung: 
The present study examined conversations of 164 mothers from seven different cultural contexts when reminiscing with their 3-year-old children. We chose samples based on their sociodemographic profiles, which represented three different cultural models: (1) autonomy (urban middle-class families from Western societies), (2) relatedness (rural farming families from non-Western societies), and (3) autonomy-relatedness (urban middle-class families from non-Western societies). The results showed that mothers from the autonomous contexts predominantly adopted an elaborative-evaluative reminiscing style (variable-oriented approach) and pattern (person-oriented approach). Mothers from the relational contexts mainly adopted a repetitive reminiscing style and pattern. There was greater heterogeneity for style variables among mothers from autonomous-relational contexts; in addition, the person-oriented approach revealed that the majority of mothers from autonomous-relational contexts showed hybrid style patterns. Thus, the cultural models, and their respective orientations towards autonomy and relatedness, were reflected in the way mothers reminisced with their children. The children's provision of memory elaborations was high in the autonomous contexts, low in the relational contexts, and moderate in the autonomous-relational contexts. Across contexts, maternal evaluations prompted children to contribute memory elaborations. Maternal elaborations were an additional predictor for children's memory, but only for families from the relational cultural model.
ISSN: 15248372
DOI: 10.1080/15248372.2011.638690

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