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Title: | "Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights!" The Jamaicanization of youth across 11 countries through reggae music? |
Authors: | Ferguson, Gail M. Boer, Diana Fischer, Ronald Hanke, Katja Ferreira, Maria Cristina Gouveia, Valdiney V. Chang, Andrew Pilati, Ronaldo Bond, Michael H. Adams, Byron G. Hernandez, Jimena de Garay Atilano, Ma Luisa Gonzalez Garcia, Luz Irene Moreno Clobert, Magali Prade, Claire Saroglou, Vassilis Zenger, Markus Uludağ Üniversitesi/Fen-Edebiyat Fakültesi/Psikoloji Bölümü. Tekman, Hasan Gürkan 6602168404 |
Keywords: | Psychology Remote acculturation Music preferences Media Reggae Jamaica Individualism Emerging adults Remote acculturation Functional-approach Cultural distance Reduce prejudice Values Adolescents Americanization Identity People Lyrics |
Issue Date: | 2016 |
Publisher: | Sage Publications |
Citation: | Ferguson, G. M. vd. (2016). ""Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights!" The Jamaicanization of youth across 11 countries through reggae music?". Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 47(4), 581-604. |
Abstract: | We investigated whether Reggae preferences are associated with similar values across cultures compared with its culture of originJamaica. Remote acculturation predicts that Reggae listeners across countries will share similar cultural values with Reggae listeners in Jamaica regardless of their cultural or geographical distance from the Caribbean island. We analyzed the correlations between preferences for Reggae music and Schwartz's 10 value types in university student samples from Jamaica and 11 other societies in Europe, South America, Africa, and Asia (total N = 2,561). In Jamaica, preferences for Reggae music were most strongly correlated with openness to change values and self-enhancement values. Across the other cultures, openness to change was the value dimension most strongly correlated with Reggae preference. Results also indicate some variations in Reggae's value associations and its similarity to the culture of origin. Reggae's value associations were more similar to Jamaica's in samples that are closer culturally in terms of Individualism/Collectivism scores, and closer geographically in terms of kilometers. In sum, results provide some support for remote value acculturation via Reggae listening across countries (i.e., Jamaicanization) moderated by cultural and geographical proximity. |
Description: | Bu çalışma, Reims[France]’düzenlenen 2014 Biennial Meeting of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology Kongresi‘nde bildiri olarak sunulmuştur. |
URI: | https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022116632910 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0022022116632910 http://hdl.handle.net/11452/31418 |
ISSN: | 0022-0221 1552-5422 |
Appears in Collections: | Scopus Web of Science |
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