The current understanding of emotional intelligence (EI) is flawed and incomplete. In the present chapter we briefly highlight some of the major controversies surrounding EI, including the lack of agreement on how to define it and measurement inconsistencies. We propose that the key flaw in current EI scholarship concerns the lack of awareness of cultural impacts on affective processes that underlie various components of EI. Drawing from prior theoretical models, we overview three components that have been described as encompassing the construct of EI: emotion perception, emotion understanding, and emotion regulation. For each of these components, we review the relevant cultural literature and discuss how cultural differences can play a substantial role in our understanding of EI as an overall construct. We conclude by discussing how culture should be incorporated into the application and assessment of EI. Ultimately, we propose that one cannot truly understand and talk about EI without considering the context of culture.
CITATION STYLE
Huynh, A. C., Oakes, H., & Grossmann, I. (2018). The Role of Culture in Understanding and Evaluating Emotional Intelligence (pp. 111–132). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-90633-1_5
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