essay

Growing up and its price in three Puerto Rican subcultures

portrait of a society : readings on puerto rican sociologyRio Piedras • Published In 1972 • Pages: 233-275

By: Wolf, Kathleen L..

Abstract
This paper is concerned with the training of children in three different classes on the island of Puerto Rico. These three classes are rural farmers in the community of Manicaboa, sugar workers in Barrio Poyal, and the middle class of the small rural town of San José. The material presented, although not comparable in all aspects, shows the operation of very different psychological dynamics in subcultures found on the same small island (p. 233). This diversity, according to the author, indicates that there is no uniform Puerto Rican personality, despite the fact that cultural traditions are fairly uniform. In the investigation of the three classes, Wolf pays special attention to their respective psychological problems. This document contains a wealth of information on household composition and family relationships, sex status, infant and child care practices, socialization processes, pregnancy and childbirth, personality development, and various forms of psychological adjustment in the society.
Subjects
Adjustment processes
Personality development
Gender status
Classes
Ethics
Ingroup antagonisms
Household
Family relationships
Conception
Pregnancy
Childbirth
Infant feeding
Infant care
Child care
Childhood activities
Cleanliness training
Sex training
Aggression training
culture
Puerto Ricans (Island)
HRAF PubDate
2012
Region
Middle America and the Caribbean
Sub Region
Caribbean
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle; 1993, 2012
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Manicabao, Barrio Poyal, and San José, Puerto Rico
Notes
[by] Kathleen L. Wolf
LCCN
none
LCSH
Puerto Ricans