Tehran – The Persian translation of the book “A Psychology of Culture,” written by Michael B. Salzman, will be translated into Persian and soon be published by Amir Kabir Publishing.
Mohaddeseh Ahi and Raziyeh Gharahi are translators of the book first published in 2018, Mehr reported.
This thought-inspired paper addresses core psychological, physiological and existential needs and explores the essential functions that culture plays in human life. It integrates diverse chains of empirical and theoretical knowledge, as well as drivers of domination and upheaval to track cultural development as a source of morality, self-esteem, identity and meaning.
Extended examples from past and ongoing hostilities also highlight cultural resilience in the aftermath of confusion and trauma, as well as the possibility of conflicting cultural reconciliation. The inspiring insights contained here have far-reaching implications for psychology, education, intergroup relationships, politics and social policy.
“Cultural Psychology” is a clinical practitioner, educator, practitioner, cultural student, students of its role and effect in human life, and students of human interest in nursing, medicine, anthropology, social work, family research. You will receive a rare tour of the human condition. , sociology, counseling, psychology. It is especially suitable as a graduate textbook.
Michael B. Salzman is professor and chairman of the Faculty of Educational Psychology. He has been featured in the fields of cross-cultural psychology, cultural psychology, intercultural training and counseling.
The licensed psychologist worked with culturally diverse groups as a teacher in “central city” Brooklyn, providing counseling for the Navajo tribe and serving as a clinician at CMHC in South Tucson, Arizona.
He has worked with Alaska Native Americans to coordinate model rural mental health programs and most recently collaborated with the Hawaii Native Leadership Project and the Native Hawaii Education Association.
Salzman is interested in the psychological functioning of culture, the result of traumatic cultural confusion, cross-cultural conflict, indigenous psychology, cultural recovery movements, and the processes of psychological decolonization.
SS/SAB