Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
879309 Current Opinion in Psychology 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The concept and predictors of happiness vary across cultures.•Americans highly value happiness and define it in terms of pleasure and enjoyment, whereas other cultures are more ambivalent about happiness and highlight its transient and potentially socially disruptive nature.•Recent work demonstrates new mediators, individual predictors, societal factors, within-culture variations, and interventions that vary cross-culturally or help explain cultural differences in happiness.

Once believed to be universal, a growing body of research shows that both the conception and predictors of happiness vary cross-culturally. First, the meaning and importance of happiness varies both across time and between nations. Americans, for instance, tend to define happiness in terms of pleasure or enjoyment and view happiness as universally positive, whereas East Asian and Middle Eastern cultures may highlight the transient and socially disruptive nature of happiness and be ambivalent about whether it is good. Second, predictors of happiness vary between cultures. Recent work highlights new mediators (e.g., relational mobility), individual predictors (e.g., person-culture fit), societal factors (e.g., good governance and wealth), within-culture variations (e.g., at the state or city level), and interventions (e.g., practicing gratitude) that differ cross-culturally or help explain cultural differences in happiness. Though many questions remain, this review highlights how these recent advances broaden and revise our understanding of culture and happiness.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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