Results 201 to 210 of about 76,577 (257)

From a Collection of Identities to Collective Identity

Cross-Cultural Research, 2014
We studied collective identity and psychological well-being in Bulgarian adolescents (305 mainstreamers, 278 Turkish-Bulgarians, and 183 Muslim-Bulgarians). Turkish-Bulgarian and Muslim-Bulgarian minorities (ethnic Bulgarians converted to Islam during the Ottoman Empire) have been subjected to severe assimilation policies until recently.
Dimitrova, Radosveta   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

The construction of collective identity

European Journal of Sociology, 1995
A general typological model for the analysis of collective identify is outlined and applied to the case of German and Japanese national identity. Primordial, civic and cultural codes of boundary construction are described with respect to their logic of exclusion, corresponding rituals etc.
EISENSTADT, Shmuel Noah   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Agency and Identity in the Collective Self

Personality and Social Psychology Review, 2021
Contemporary research on human sociality is heavily influenced by the social identity approach, positioning social categorization as the primary mechanism governing social life. Building on the distinction between agency and identity in the individual self (ā€œIā€ vs.
Garriy Shteynberg   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Simple Collective Identity Functions

Theory and Decision, 2008
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Cengelci, Murat Ali, Sanver, M. Remzi
openaire   +2 more sources

Collective Identities

2019
Collective identity is an abstract category which encompasses narrowly definable concepts such as group identity, cultural identity, or regional identity, and historically specific types of community formation and sociation such as clans, tribes, peoples, nations, or ethnic minorities, including socio-structural concepts such as social status and class
openaire   +1 more source

On Collective Identity

ProtoSociology, 2003
I argue that a number of persons form a "collective" when they share a "first person plural perspective." This perspective is shaped by a collective self-concept which, along with its causal history, uniquely identifies the collective. Collectives persist through changes in membership by maintaining this collective self-concept.
openaire   +1 more source

Collective Memories and Collective Identities

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 2003
This ethnographic study of two Native American social movement organizations challenging educational practices examines the collective memory processes that occur simultaneously and in conjunction with the process of collective identity to help maintain movement unity.
openaire   +1 more source

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