Frank A. Johnson (Author)
Dependency and Japanese Socialization: Psychoanalytic and Anthropological Investigations in Amae
Editura: NEW YORK UNIV PR
Anul aparitiei: 1995
"Surprisingly readable and studded with nuggets of insight."--The Daily Yomiuri "This insightful, well-written, fascinating book offers new understandings, not only of Japan, but also of American culture. It is essential for those in anthropology, psychology, sociology, and psychiatry who are interested in culture, as well as those in law and the business community who deal with Japan."--Paul Ekman, Ph.D., Director, Human Interaction Laboratory, Langley Porter Institute, University of California, San Francisco "[A] thoughtful cross-cultural study of development...His work can only enhance the still evolving psychoanalytic theory of preoedipal development as it is being derived mostly from psychoanalytic research on child-parent interaction in American families."--Calvin F. Settlage, M.D. "Johnson's ambitious and exhaustive synthesis of anthropological and psychological treatments of dependency raises interesting questions. . . Johnson alerts the reader to issues of universalism and relativity and leads us to ask, 'What would psychoanalysis be like, if it had originated in Japan?'"--Merry I. White, Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies, Harvard University ". . . ...