- Issue
- Journal of Siberian Federal University. Humanities & Social Sciences. 2023 16 (1)
- Authors
- Zabelina, Ekaterina V.; Kurnosova, Svetlana A.; Koptseva, Natalya P.; Luzan, Vladimir S.; Telitsyna, Aleksandra Yu.
- Contact information
- Zabelina, Ekaterina V.: Chelyabinsk State University Chelyabinsk, Russian Federation; katya_k@mail.ru; Kurnosova, Svetlana A.: Chelyabinsk State University Chelyabinsk, Russian Federation; ksa0308@mail.ru; Koptseva, Natalya P.: Siberian Federal University Krasnoyarsk, Russian Federation; decanka@mail.ru; Luzan, Vladimir S.: Siberian Federal University Krasnoyarsk, Russian Federation; vladimir_luzan@list.ru; Telitsyna, Aleksandra Yu.: Higher School of Economics (HSE University) Moscow, Russian Federation; atelitsyna@hse.ru
- Keywords
- psychological time; indigenous peoples of the Arctic zone of the Russian Federation; subjective well-being
- Abstract
Psychological time is the marker showing changes in society related to informatization, urbanization and other global trends. At the same time, in Arctic territories, where the consequences of informatization and globalization are not so noticeable, indigenous small peoples have maintained a measured pace of life in harmonious coexistence with nature. This situation suggests that the perception of time has special specifics there. Consequently, the study of psychological time of the representatives of the indigenous small peoples of the Russian Arctic on the example of the Nenets made it possible to identify the features of the components of psychological time of this people compared with the inhabitants of the southwestern part of the Russian Federation; to compare the emotional component of psychological time (attitude to past, present and future) with other small indigenous peoples; to determine the components of the structure of psychological time of the Nenets, and the contribution of each component to the shaping of their subjective economic well-being
- Pages
- 24–41
- EDN
- XRVCVM
- Paper at repository of SibFU
- https://elib.sfu-kras.ru/handle/2311/149736
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).