Cultural Psychology
PDF copies of the articles, chapters, and reports listed below may be downloaded by clicking on my linked name within the citation (* indicates student/trainee co-authors).
*Wendt, D. C., & Gone, J. P. (2012). Decolonizing psychological inquiry in Native American communities: The promise of qualitative methods. In D. K. Nagata, L. Kohn-Wood, & L. A. Suzuki (Eds.), Qualitative strategies for ethnocultural research (pp. 161-178). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
*Alcántara, C., Abelson, J. L., & Gone, J. P. (2012). Beyond anxious predisposition: Do Padecer de Nervios and Ataque de Nervios add incremental validity to predictions of current distress among Mexican immigrant mothers? Depression & Anxiety, 29(1), 23-31.
Gone, J. P. (2011). “I came to tell you of my life”: Narrative expositions of “mental health” in an American Indian community. In M. Aber, K. Maton, & E. Seidman (Eds.), Empowering settings and voices for social change (pp. 134-154). New York: Oxford University Press.
Gone, J. P., & *Alcantara, C. (2010). The Ethnographically Contextualized Case Study Method: Exploring ambitious achievement in an American Indian community. Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology, 16(2), 159-168.
Gone, J. P., & Kirmayer, L. J. (2010). On the wisdom of considering culture and context in psychopathology. In T. Millon, R. F. Krueger, & E. Simonsen (Eds.), Contemporary directions in psychopathology: Scientific foundations of the DSM-V and ICD-11 (pp. 72-96). New York: Guilford Press.
Gone, J. P. (2010). An American Indian illustration of primary prevention (Sidebar for Ch. 15: Mental health in the realm of primary prevention by A. M. Wells, G. A. Mance, & M. T. Tirmazi). In L. Cohen, V. Chavez, & S. Chehimi (Eds.), Prevention is primary: Strategies for community well being (2nd ed., pp. 384-385). San Francisco, Cultural Adaptation: Jossey-Bass.
Gone, J. P. (2009). Encountering professional psychology: Re-envisioning mental health services for Native North America. In L. J. Kirmayer & G. G. Valaskakis (Eds.), Healing traditions: The mental health of Aboriginal peoples in Canada (pp. 419-439). Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
Anderson, J. D., & Gone, J. P. (2009). Native American religious traditions. In R. A. Shweder, T. R. Biddell, A. C. Dailey, S. D. Dixon, P. J. Miller, & J. Modell (Eds.), The child: An encyclopedic companion (pp. 670-672). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Gone, J. P. (2008). “So I can be like a Whiteman”: The cultural psychology of space and place in American Indian mental health. Culture & Psychology, 14(3), 369-399.
Gone, J. P. (2008). Introduction: Mental health discourse as Western cultural proselytization. Ethos, 36(3), 310-315.