A tale of two cultural life scripts: do young second-generation Turkish immigrants versus young Danes in Denmark perceive life through different cultural lenses?

Memory ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Müge Özbek ◽  
Annette Bohn ◽  
Dorthe Berntsen
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Anne ◽  
Steve M. J. Janssen

Cultural Life Scripts (CLS) are shared knowledge about personal events expected to be experienced by individuals within a society, and used as a framework for life story narration. Differences in CLS for individuals with depression and trauma, and their relations to anxiety, stress, and well-being, have not been investigated. Malaysian participants (N = 120) described and rated seven significant events most likely to be experienced by a prototypical infant from their culture, and seven significant events they had experienced or expected to experience in their own life. Participants then answered questionnaires about depression and trauma symptoms and about anxiety, stress, and well-being. The subclinical depression group listed less typical CLS events, whereas the subclinical PTSD group listed less positive individual life story events. The findings indicate that, although individuals with depression and trauma possess knowledge of the CLS, there may be small differences in the cognitive processing of CLS and individual life story events.


2004 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorthe Berntsen ◽  
David C. Rubin

2020 ◽  
pp. 003329412091349
Author(s):  
Michele Anne ◽  
Steve M. J. Janssen

Cultural life scripts are shared knowledge about personal events expected to be experienced by individuals within a society and used as a framework for life story narration. Differences in cultural life scripts for individuals with depression and trauma, and their relations to anxiety, stress, and well-being, have not been investigated. Malaysian participants ( N =  120) described and rated seven significant events most likely to be experienced by a prototypical infant from their culture, and seven significant events they had experienced or expected to experience in their own life. Participants then answered questionnaires about depression and trauma symptoms and about anxiety, stress, and well-being. The subclinical depression group listed less typical cultural life scripts events, whereas the subclinical post-traumatic stress disorder group listed less positive individual life story events. The findings indicate that, although individuals with depression and trauma possess knowledge of the cultural life scripts, there may be small differences in the cognitive processing of cultural life scripts and individual life story events.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nora Crook

A new generation of poets flourishes during the politically turbulent years, 1810–1824. The chief names are Byron, Shelley, and Keats. They are associated with rebellion, solitary genius, lyricism and dying young, but this is an oversimplification. More recent perspectives emphasize social networks, with the journalist and poet Leigh Hunt a key figure. That the second generation can be represented by three names is challenged by the diversity of poets writing during this period, and the variousness of the poetry written. Poetry was at the centre of cultural life.


Cephalalgia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 1177-1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Kavuk ◽  
C Weimar ◽  
BT Kim ◽  
G Gueneyli ◽  
M Araz ◽  
...  

The aim of this research was to study the prevalence of chronic headache (CH) and associated socio-cultural factors in Turkish immigrants and native Germans. Five hundred and twenty-three Turkish and German company employees were screened using a standard questionnaire. Those who suffered from headaches were also examined by a neurologist. Complete data were available for 471 (90%) subjects. Thirty-four participants (7.2%) had CH. Two independent factors for association with CH could be identified: overuse of acute headache medication (OR = 72.5; 95% CI 25.9-202.9), and being a first-generation Turkish immigrant compared with native Germans (OR = 4.4; 95% CI 1.4-13.7). In contrast, the factor associated with chronic headache was not increased in second-generation Turkish immigrants. Medication overuse was significantly more frequent in first-generation Turkish immigrants (21.6%) compared with second-generation Turkish immigrants (3.3%) and native Germans (3.6%; X2 = 38.0, P < 0.001). First-generation Turkish immigrants did not contact headache specialists at all, compared with 2.8% of second-generation Turkish immigrants and 8.8% of native Germans ( X2 = 118.4, P < 0.001). Likewise no first-generation Turkish immigrant suffering from CH received headache preventive treatment, compared with 6.6% of native Germans ( X2 = 19.1, P = 0.014). The data from this cross-sectional study reveal a high prevalence of chronic headache as well as a very low utilization of adequate medical care in first-generation Turkish immigrants in Germany.


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