Frontiers in Psychology (Jul 2023)

The contribution of cultural identity to subjective well-being in collectivist countries: a study in the context of contemporary Chinese culture

  • Song Zhou,
  • Gaoyu Liu,
  • Yingming Huang,
  • Tingyu Huang,
  • Shiya Lin,
  • Jie Lan,
  • Huaqi Yang,
  • Rongmao Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1170669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionThough the important effect of cultural identity on subjective well-being is widely acknowledged, the details of how different cultures’ unique features influence well-being remain to be revealed. To address this issue in the context of Chinese culture, the present study investigates whether and how the prominent features of Chinese culture—collectivism and red culture—shape Chinese people’s subjective well-being.MethodsThe Red Cultural Identity Scale, Subjective Well-Being Scale, Collectivism Scale, and Perspective-Taking Scale were used to assess 1,045 Chinese residents.ResultsThe results showed that red cultural identity positively predicted participants’ subjective well-being through the mediated role of collectivism. Furthermore, perspective-taking was found to moderate the mediating effect of collectivism.DiscussionThese results demonstrate that the way cultural identity predicts subjective well-being is highly correlated to specific cultural features, e.g., the opinion of values, which was significant in practice with a cross-cultural background.

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