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Self-Construction in a Nightly Gathering of Culture and Person: Rendezvous or Conflict?University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands Psychology has provided a variety of ways to conceptualize the relation between culture and person. In order to study the work of culture in the person, or, as I prefer to say, the persons work on culture, the vantage point for a psychological analysis is necessarily the persons experiential world. According to the cultural psychologist Boesch, the persons experiential worldthe fantasmicsystemis guided by cultural suggestions: myths. Fantasms are understood as personal, and thus novel transformations of myths. In this commentary, I interpret the four Samoan dreams presented by Mageo (2002) in two ways. First, they are examples of personally constructed fantasms, guided by a variety of conflicting and opposing cultural myths in a postcolonial world. These dreams, however, can also be understood as accounts of a multivoiced, conflicting (and thus non-dialogical in the strict sense of the term) self, which is far from integrating heterogeneous voices of the traditional and colonial past and postcolonial present. Thus, the dreams are not a peaceful dialogue between person and culturea nightly rendezvousbut rather represent the persons struggle and fight for selfhood and identity. Mageo provides convincing empirical evidence for the assumption that change in historical times is experienced on a personal levelin the persons self- and identity-formation. Her idiographic analysis is an important step in finding general lawsnomoithat are applicable to human beings rather than to variables.
Key Words: culture fantasm imagination myth postcolonialism self
Culture & Psychology, Vol. 8, No. 4,
449-458 (2002) This article has been cited by other articles:
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