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Hubert Hermans- Creator of the Dialogical Self Theory

New Book

Positioning and Counter-Positioning in a Globalizing Society

Cambridge University Press Read the review.

Self, Identity, and Globalization in Times of Uncertainty: A Dialogical Analysis Print E-mail

Review of General Psychology, 2007, 11, 31-61

 

Hubert J. M. Hermans
Radboud University
Giancarlo Dimaggio
Terzo Centro di Psicoterapia Cognitiva
Our era is witnessing an increasing impact of globalization on self and identity and at
the same time a growing uncertainty. The experience of uncertainty motivates individuals
and groups to find local niches for identity construction. This article’s central tenet
is that the processes of globalization and localization, as globalization’s counterforce,
require a dialogical conceptualization of self and identity in which global and local
voices are involved in continuous interchanges and negotiations. This tenet is elaborated
along 2 lines of argument. First, 3 factors are described as crucial to understanding
the processes of globalization and localization on the individual level: the increasing
number of voices and countervoices, the role of social power, and the role of emotions.
Second, the authors argue that the apparent tension between the widening horizons of
globalization and the need for local niches requires acknowledgment of the pervasive
influence of biologically based needs for stability, safety, and security. Finally, the
authors propose studying self and identity on 3 levels—individual, local, and global—
and some lines of research at the interface of these levels.

Hubert J. M. Hermans Radboud University,   Giancarlo Dimaggio Terzo Centro di Psicoterapia Cognitiva

 

Our era is witnessing an increasing impact of globalization on self and identity and at the same time a growing uncertainty. The experience of uncertainty motivates individuals and groups to find local niches for identity construction. This article’s central tenet is that the processes of globalization and localization, as globalization’s counterforce, require a dialogical conceptualization of self and identity in which global and local voices are involved in continuous interchanges and negotiations.

This tenet is elaborated along 2 lines of argument. First, 3 factors are described as crucial to understanding the processes of globalization and localization on the individual level: the increasing number of voices and countervoices, the role of social power, and the role of emotions. Second, the authors argue that the apparent tension between the widening horizons of globalization and the need for local niches requires acknowledgment of the pervasive influence of biologically based needs for stability, safety, and security. Finally, the authors propose studying self and identity on 3 levels—individual, local, and global— and some lines of research at the interface of these levels. Read more (PDF)