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Assessing the Importance of Internal and External Self-Esteem and Their Relationship to Honor Concerns in Six Countries
Author(s) -
van Osch Yvette,
Bender Michael,
He Jia,
Adams Byron G.,
Kunuroglu Filiz,
Tillman Richard N.,
Benítez Isabel,
Sekaja Lusanda,
Mamathuba Neo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cross-cultural research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.789
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1552-3578
pISSN - 1069-3971
DOI - 10.1177/1069397120909383
Subject(s) - honor , dignity , self esteem , social psychology , psychology , scale (ratio) , face (sociological concept) , sociology , social science , law , political science , computer science , geography , cartography , operating system
We assessed empirical support for (a) the widely held notion that across so-called “honor, dignity, and face cultures,” internal and external components of self-esteem are differentially important for overall self-esteem; and (b) the idea that concerns for honor are related to internal and external components of self-esteem in honor cultures but not in dignity and face cultures. Most importantly, we also set out to (c) investigate whether measures are equivalent, that is, whether a comparison of means and relationships across cultural groups is possible with the employed scales. Data were collected in six countries ( N = 1,099). We obtained only metric invariance for the self-esteem and honor scales, allowing for comparisons of relationships across samples, but not scale means. Partly confirming theoretical ideas on the importance of internal and external components of self-esteem, we found that only external rather than both external and internal self-esteem was relatively more important for overall self-esteem in “honor cultures”; in a “dignity” culture, internal self-esteem was relatively more important than external self-esteem. Contrary to expectations, in a “face” culture, internal self-esteem was relatively more important than external self-esteem. We were not able to conceptually replicate earlier reported relationships between components of self-esteem and the concern for honor, as we observed no cultural differences in the relationship between self-esteem and honor. We point toward the need for future studies to consider invariance testing in the field of honor to appropriately understand differences and similarities between samples.

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