The contribution of cultural identity to subjective well-being in collectivist countries: a study in the context of contemporary Chinese culture

Though the important effect of cultural identity on subjective well-being is widely acknowledged, the details of how different cultures' unique features influence well-being remain to be revealed. To address this issue in the context of Chinese culture, the present study investigates whether an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in psychology 2023-07, Vol.14, p.1170669-1170669
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Song, Liu, Gaoyu, Huang, Yingming, Huang, Tingyu, Lin, Shiya, Lan, Jie, Yang, Huaqi, Lin, Rongmao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Though the important effect of cultural identity on subjective well-being is widely acknowledged, the details of how different cultures' unique features influence well-being remain to be revealed. To address this issue in the context of Chinese culture, the present study investigates whether and how the prominent features of Chinese culture-collectivism and red culture-shape Chinese people's subjective well-being. The Red Cultural Identity Scale, Subjective Well-Being Scale, Collectivism Scale, and Perspective-Taking Scale were used to assess 1,045 Chinese residents. The results showed that red cultural identity positively predicted participants' subjective well-being through the mediated role of collectivism. Furthermore, perspective-taking was found to moderate the mediating effect of collectivism. These results demonstrate that the way cultural identity predicts subjective well-being is highly correlated to specific cultural features, e.g., the opinion of values, which was significant in practice with a cross-cultural background.
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1170669