• Title/Summary/Keyword: 자기비하 정서경험

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Netizen's Self-Enhancing Emotional Experiences in Avatar Consumption - Using Ethnographic Interviews (네티즌의 아바타 소비에서의 자기고양 정서경험 -민속지적 면접을 이용하여)

  • Song, Hyun-Ju;Yoon, Jung-Hai
    • Journal of Families and Better Life
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.151-168
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    • 2007
  • It is necessary to understand netizen's emotional experiences in avatar consumption. We studied the emotional experience through ethnographic interviews with six informants. In this study, we used the descriptive questions, structural questions, and comparative questions. Netizen's self-enhancing emotional experience were divided into two emotional experiences: emotional experiences in one's world and emotional experiences in relationship with others. First, emotional experience in one's world included self-satisfaction, releasing stress, catharsis, immersion, desire of change, and sense of achievement. Second, emotional experiences in relationship with others were divided into self-enhancing emotional experiences and self-humbling emotional experience. Self-enhancing emotional experiences included the relative satisfaction, the desire of showing off/distinction, and the desire of conformity. Self-humbling emotional experience included the feeling of inferiority.

The difference of cultural emotions in unfair situation in Korea, China, Japan, and the U.S. (부당한 상황에서 경험되는 정서의 문화 차이: 한국, 중국, 일본, 미국을 중심으로)

  • Min Han;Seungah Ryu
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.251-272
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    • 2018
  • There could be different ways of perception, emotions, and behaviors facing on unfair situation according to the culture background by which people have been affected. We investigated whether definition, feelings, and behaviors in 4 countries (Korea, China, Japan, and the US) would differ in terms of unfair situations. We further examined the relationship between new self-construal model (subjectivity-objectivity-autonomy model) and behaviors resulted from unfair situations. Three hundred seventeen participants (87 Koreans, 71 Chinese, 80 Japanese, and 79 Americans) took part in this research. We found that all countries defined unfair situation as "having a disadvantage or blame that one did not done by him or her" with the highest percentage, but there was a different percentage according to countries. Next, Chinese felt disappointment or betray from the situations highly while others expressed anger with the largest portion. In the area of behaviors, three countries in Asia answered "no behaviors" with the highest percentage while Americans mostly responded "direct expressions". In terms of self-construal model, subjective self was high in Chinese and Koreans while autonomy was high in Chinese and American. Japanese showed objective self with the highest. Implications and future research are discussed.