Introduction
Kate C. McLean
Part I. Describing
Chapter 1. Using Life Story Methods to Illuminate
Cultural-Historical Dimensions of LGBTQ+ Identity Development
Across the Generations
Nic M. Weststrate
Chapter 2. Listening for Culture: Using Interviews to Understand
Identity in Context
Leoandra Onnie Rogers, Ursula Moffitt, Courtney Meiling Jones
Chapter 3. Strengths-based Approaches to Conducting Research with
Low Income and Other Marginalized Populations
Sherry Hamby
Chapter 4. Cultural Snapshots: Identifying Cultural Patterns that
Influence Implicit Racial Bias
Kristin Pauker, Sarah A. Lamer, Shahana Ansari and Max Weisbuch
Chapter 5. Social Media as Tools for Cultural Change in the
Transition to Adulthood
Adriana M. Manago, Nicholas D. Santer, Logan L. Barsigian and
Abigail S. Walsh
Chapter 6. Relational Methodology
James Allen, Inna D. Rivkin and Joseph E. Trimble
Chapter 7. Methodologies for Cross-Cultural Comparisons of
Subjective Experiences: Addressing Response Biases
Zachary Willett, Kendall Lawley, Barbara Lehman, & Christie
Scollon
Part II. Transforming
Chapter 8. "Justice for Native People, Justice for Native Me":
Using Digital Storytelling Methodologies to Change the Master
Narrative of Native American Peoples
Jillian Fish and Payton K. Counts
Chapter 9. Participatory Action Research with Immigrant-Origin
Youth
Dalal Katsiaficas
Chapter 10. Positive Exemplar Exposure: A Method for Early Implicit
Racial Bias Change
Antonya Marie Gonzalez
Chapter 11. Guidance for Applied Cross-National Research in
Under-Resourced Countries: Lessons from a Gender-Based Violence
Intervention in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Karen J. Torjesen, Meg A. Warren and Grace Wamue-Ngare
Chapter 12. Interpersonal Violence in Context: A Call to Consider
Cultural Stigma in Theory and Research on the Psychology of
Trauma
Brianna C. Delker
Part III. Broader Issues
Chapter 13. Intersectionality as an analytic sensibility in
cultural research
Kevin Delucio, Ph.D. and Adrian J. Villicana, Ph.D.
Chapter 14. Mining for Culture or Researching for Justice?
Unsettling Psychology through Indigenist Conversation
Shawn Wilson, Andrea V. Breen and Lindsay DuPré
Chapter 15. Cultural Psychology, Diversity, and Representation in
Open Science
Moin Syed and Ummul-Kiram Kathawalla
Kate C. McLean is a Professor of Psychology at Western Washington
University. Her research program centers on the development of
identity in adolescence and adulthood, placing special emphasis on
the cultural and relational processes of identity construction, as
well as the correlates and consequences of individual differences
in narrative identity construction. She is the co-editor of The
Oxford Handbook of Identity Development, and the author
of The Co-Authored Self.
"The field of psychology has spent the past decade wrestling with
two crises: a crisis of evidence about the robustness of our
findings, and a crisis of relevance about the utility of our work
for addressing issues in society. The chapters in this volume
provide insights to address both sets of concerns. Authors discuss
methodologies from cultural psychology that can be leveraged to
improve to the rigor psychological research, and the practical
relevance of
that research for improving lives in our diverse society." -- Neil
A. Lewis, Jr., Ph.D, Cornell University and Weill Cornell Medicine,
Department of Communication, Division of General Internal
Medicine,
USA
"This is a definite must read for any budding or established
researcher and practitioner of (cross)cultural psychology. This
book provides a unique and much needed perspective into the
complexities, challenges, and positive gains of doing socially
just, ethical, experientially-relevant, and theoretically and
methodologically sound cultural research. The overall framework of
the book DSthat culture can be described but also transformed-- is
one that most
traditional and cross-cultural researchers have not thought about
enough. This book can teach them why and how this perspective is
critically important. It helps also that the editor has done a
terrific job in
collecting and integrating views from the relevant experts while
covering a very impressive array of topics." -- Veronica
Benet-Martinez, Ph.D, Research Professor of Political and Social
Sciences, Pompeu Fabra University, Spain
"The ways in which we do science is changing. As the field of
psychology strives to become more inclusive, equitable, and
transparent, this book comes at the perfect time. The impressive
collection of chapters from leading scholars will inspire
researchers to think more critically and creatively about our
approaches and methods. To do so this book describes a diversity of
innovative methodologies to build a body of knowledge that is
rigorous, relevant, and,
importantly, not doing harm to the people and communities involved.
Cultural Methods in Psychology will spark new ideas and is a joy to
read." -- Linda Juang, Ph.D, Professor of Inclusive Education,
Diversity in Education and Development, Univrersity of Potsdam,
Germany
"This book is a timely and excellent resource for all scholars who
are committed to supporting and conducting culturally responsible
science. The nuanced discussions of equity and justice as they
relate to our scientific practices are refreshing and absolutely
needed to move the field of psychology forward." -- Adriana J.
Umaña-Taylor, Ph.D, Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot Professor of Education,
Harvard Graduate School of Education, USA
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