Cultural Contingencies: Behavior Analytic Perspectives on Cultural Practices
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Overview
In recent years, a number of books devoted to a behavior analytic approach to cultural practices have appeared, and this book falls within that domain. At the same time, however, this book is unique in that it minimizes the space devoted to abstract discussion of behavior analytic concepts and principles. Instead, the authors focus exclusively upon particular cultural practices, which are disparate and drawn from three countries, ranging from public health practices to historical utopian communities to various practices of visual artists, art dealers, and gallery owners. In addition, cultural practices regarding women and the changing Japanese society's effect on Japanese women's behavior are considered. Changes in policies aimed at increasing the birth rate in Quebec are analyzed in behavior analytic terms. The wide range of cultural practices addressed by this book are given coherence by the fact that all are addressed by the various authors in terms of behavior analytic concepts and principles. This book is further confirmation of the fact, unappreciated by some, that a behavior analytic approach can address practices that consist of the behaviors of large numbers of people. The authors demonstrate that the behavior analytic approach is not culture-bound. Rather, they show that behavior analytic concepts and principles can illuminate human practices in any culture.
Synopsis
This book presents a behavior analytic approach to a wide variety of cultural practices, drawn from three countries, focusing upon such disparate cultural practices as public health, utopian communities, and the visual arts.
Booknews
Lamal (emeritus, psychology, U. of North Carolina, Charlotte) marshals 30 contributors in applying the analytic lens of social psychology to specific areas of cultural practices in three countries (the US, Canada, and Japan): health (preventative medicine, treatment compliance, community health, and anorexia as the interplay of culture, behavior, and biology); family life (childrearing, welfare policy, and experimental communities); plus other diverse behavioral assessment domains (reproduction and government policy, women's roles in Japan's economic success, the media, and the visual arts). Readers must refer elsewhere for the theoretical basis of the field. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.