Exploring Exploration as a Recursive Process

Meike Watzlawik, E. Schachter, Carla Cunha

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

Exploration is one of the core concepts in identity research. Identity theorists thus far mainly concentrate on exploration as the process in which future

selves are compared to current selves. This process is triggered in a number of ways. In this chapter, we will emphasize culturally normative as well as non-normative identity exploration among adolescents and young adults. Through analysis of case studies, we find that people not only compare future to current, but also past selves to current selves, and in the process revise their identity histories. We explore how recursivity and revisiting inform the exploration process and do this by looking not just into the future, but backward, too, which is a process we know relatively less about in identity literature
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationCultural Psychology of Recursive Processes
EditorsZachary Beckstead
Place of PublicationCharlotte, NC
Chapter6
Pages161-192
Number of pages32
StatePublished - 15 May 2015

Publication series

NameAdvances in Cultural Psychology: Constructing Human Development

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Exploring Exploration as a Recursive Process'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this