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Can people really change? Changing self-identity and 'other'…
Can people really change? Changing self-identity and 'other' relationships across the lifespan
Longitudinal studies
Millenium Cohort Study (205)
Medical Research Council's National Study of Health (205)
National Child Development Study (206)
Warin (2010) - studying the self
Stages
Erikson (1950) - the Eight Stages of Man
Across culture and history
Dien (2000) - development across the lifespan is influenced as much by our past as it is by our present and even our future.
Vygotsky (1978) - sociocultural theory. Psychological phenomena are mediated by our interactions with tools and artefacts (concrete or symbolic). Children are born into a world of established practices and pre-organised identities. Development and identity is inseperable from culture and environment.
Bronfenbrenner (1979) - a changing and developing person is always in interaction with a changing and evolving environment. This involves a next of structures/settings placed within each other.
Transitions
Zittoun (2006) - four types of rupture that a person can experience
Change in cultural context
Change of sphere of experience
Change in relationships and interactions
Change from within a person
Hale and Abreu (2010) - moving from Portugal to Britain, rupture as a new sphere of experience
Self-other relationships