Author/Authors :
JAMES H. LIU
REBEKAH GOLDSTEIN-HAWES ، نويسنده , , DENIS HILTON، نويسنده , , Lili Huang ، نويسنده , , CECILIA GASTARDO-CONACO، نويسنده , , EMMA DRESLER-HAWKE، نويسنده , , FLORENCE PITTOLO، نويسنده , , Ying-yi Hong، نويسنده , , COLLEEN WARD، نويسنده , , SHEELA ABRAHAM، نويسنده , , EMIKO KASHIMA، نويسنده , , MEGUMI M. OHASHI، نويسنده , , Masaki Yuki، نويسنده , , YUKAKO HIDAKA، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Social representations of world history were assessed using the open-ended questions, “What are the most
important events in world history?” and “Who are the most influential persons in world history in the last
1,000 years?” Data from six Asian and sixWestern samples showed cross-cultural consensus. Historical representations
were (a) focused on the recent past, (b) centered around politics and war, and (c) dominated by
the events of the World Wars and (d) the individual Hitler, who was universally perceived as negative. (e)
Representations were more Eurocentric than ethnocentric. (f) The importance of economics and sciencewas
underrepresented. (g) Most cultures nominated people (more than events) idiosyncratic to their own culture.
These data reflect power relations in theworld and provide resources and constraints for the conduct of international
relations. The degree of cross-cultural consensus suggests that hybridity across Eastern andWestern
cultures in the representation of knowledge may be underestimated.
Keywords :
collective remembering , Globalization , Social representations , ingroup favoritism , Eurocentrism , Ethnocentrism