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・ William E. Simonds
・ William E. Skillend
・ William E. Slemmons
・ William E. Smith
・ William E. Smith (judge)
・ William E. Smith House
・ William E. Snyder
・ William E. Somerville
・ William E. Coles, Jr.
・ William E. Connolly
・ William E. Conway, Jr.
・ William E. Cooper
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・ William E. Corbin
・ William E. Cox
William E. Cross, Jr.
・ William E. Crow
・ William E. Curtis House
・ William E. Dannemeyer
・ William E. Dargie
・ William E. Davis
・ William E. deGarthe
・ William E. DePuy
・ William E. Dietrich
・ William E. Dodd, Jr.
・ William E. Dodge
・ William E. Dodge House
・ William E. Dodge, III
・ William E. Dodge, Jr.
・ William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility


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William E. Cross, Jr. : ウィキペディア英語版
William E. Cross, Jr.

William E. Cross, Jr., Ph.D. is a leading theorist and researcher in the field of ethnic identity development, specifically Black identity development.〔()〕 He is best known for his Nigrescence Model, first detailed in a 1971 publication, and his book, Shades of Black, published in 1991. Dr. Cross’ Nigrescence Model expanded upon the work of other Black psychologists that came before him, and created an important foundation for racial/ethnic identity psychology.〔()〕 It has proved a sensible and available framework for both individual and collective social change. Throughout his career, Cross was largely concerned with racial/ethnic identity theory and the negative effects of Western thought and science on the psychology of the minority, and specifically the need for “psychological liberation under conditions of oppression.” 〔()〕
==Biography==
Bill Cross, the son of Bill and Margaret Cross, attended McCosh Elementary School in Chicago. He graduated from Evanston Township High School (ETHS) in Evanston, IL in 1959.〔()〕 Four of his siblings also attended ETHS but Bill was the only child of Bill and Margaret Cross to attend college.〔()〕〔()〕
Cross received a BA in psychology from Denver University in 1963.〔()〕 While at DU, Cross was the President of the Alpha Chapter of Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity.〔()〕 Here, he met Badi Foster, who would later become his best man and lifelong friend and mentor. While at DU, Cross seriously questioned his religious beliefs and eventually denounced God because he couldn’t explain slavery or the Holocaust.〔()〕 These revelations influenced his later work, especially the transition stage of his model (Immersion-Emersion). Cross worked on his masters in clinical psychology at Roosevelt University in Chicago, where he became familiar with the stages of therapy during clinical training.〔()〕 Although he never completed his masters, this therapy-process perspective influenced his later work and is evident in his work with process and developmental stage. It is also important to note that during this time (the 60’s), there was a resurgence of Black nationalism, forging the way for a Black Power Movement.〔()〕 This politically heated timeframe set the stage for, and encouraged, Black professionals to realize their roles within a traditionally White-oriented professional environment, and to begin to openly question the White-dominance in many fields.〔()〕 Around this time, in 1968, the Association of Black Psychologists (ABP) was founded, and its members came “to the realization that they are Black people first and psychologists second.” 〔()〕
Cross’ encounter, in accordance with the Nigrescence Model, was the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., on April 4, 1968.〔()〕 After this, Cross was ensnared in the Black Consciousness Movement, which largely influenced his formulation of the Nigrescence Theory, a theory that explained the variance of identities and how this related to the fluctuation that accompanies social movements.〔()〕 During the Vietnam War, Cross became the Director of West Side Service Center (WSSC) in Evanston, IL.〔()〕 With the Black Power Movement in full swing, Cross was put in charge of creating proactive programs to engage the youth of Evanston. During this time, he regularly attended OBAC (Organization of Black American Culture) meetings.〔()〕 Cross relates that at these meetings, he learned the importance of culture consciousness, not just race consciousness, an idea that would become influential in his model of race and cultural identity conceptions.〔()〕 He also claims to have learned much about the conversion process through his interactions of Jimmy Reid, who organized a second-tier Black Panther organization, and happened to share office space with the WSSC staff.〔()〕 He saw that black identity conversion transcended social class, and learned that the “identity must be complemented by material change or else one is forced to fall back on a survival mode.” 〔()〕 Cross describes that his role as Director of West Side Service Center corresponded to his Immersion-Emersion experience.〔()〕
On recommendation from his college friend Badi Foster, Cross served as assistant to the Chair of Afro-American Studies at Princeton University starting in the summer of 1969.〔()〕 At Princeton, Foster helped Cross make the connection between psychology and African American Studies.〔()〕 Badi, along with his Princeton colleagues, urged Cross to write about his ideas that there was a process through which Black men and women underwent which had stages involving anger (which was largely portrayed in media messages at the time), and that these stages were passing, and not identities in and of themselves.〔()〕
While at Princeton, Cross was introduced to Dawn Monique Jackson, Princeton’s Assistant Director of Admissions, and the two eventually married.〔()〕 The couple had a rocky initial 15 years of marriage, including constant disputes that eventually led to their separation for 5 years.〔()〕 Before filing for a divorce, however, they came back together and were reunited with their only daughter. They have been married 40 years now and are happily married.〔()〕 Their only daughter, Tuere Binta Cross, now holds a MSW degree from NYU and is currently employed as a social worker in Denver.〔()〕
During his time at Princeton, Cross began meeting with William S. Hall, one of America’s most accomplished black psychologists, who was just starting his career as a psychologist at the time.〔()〕 After discussing his ideas, Hall helped Cross devise ways to empirically test his model. The items that they created for a Q-sort experiment would eventually influence the first version of the Racial Identity Attitude Scale (RIAS).〔()〕 “The Negro-to-Black Conversion Experience: Toward a Psychology of Black Liberation” was published in the July 1971 issue of Black World, Hoyt Fuller’s journal, based in Atlanta.〔()〕 With pressure building against the Black Movement in the 1970s, Fuller was eventually forced to shut down Black World.〔()〕 Shortly thereafter, Bill Hall published the results of his empirical study in 1972, which was later referred to as the Hall-Cross Model. In 1976, Cross completed doctoral studies in Psychology at Princeton University.〔()〕
After graduating from Princeton, Cross became an Assistant Professor at Cornell University in the summer of 1973, where he taught black studies and psychology.〔()〕 Although he began his career as a “social experimental psychologist” at Cornell, he left as a cultural psychologist 21 years later.〔()〕 Cross relates, “As a cultural psychologist, my work examines the cultural, historical, and economic forces shaping human development and everyday psychological functioning in general, and black identity development and functioning in particular.” 〔()〕 Cross published ''Shades of Black'' in 1991, which was largely a tribute to his experiences at the Africana Center at Cornell.〔()〕 He published this text with the help of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. who motivated him to write the book, and Robert L. Harris who introduced him to Janet M. Francendese, a senior editor at Temple University Press.〔()〕 Cross relates that this book was his attempt to refocus black psychology away from that of self-hatred and the social pathology model which had largely prevailed during this time, and bring attention to the variability of one’s identity and the phenomenon of identity transformation.〔()〕 It largely emphasized the impossibility of describing the black identity as if it were a singular identity or “type.” There is no singular all-encompassing definition of what it means to be black. Through this work, Cross relates that he “discovered major shortcomings in () original Nigrescence Model,” and so the second part of Shades of Black includes a revised version of his 1971 Negro-to-Black Conversion Model.〔()〕
Cross left Cornell in 1994 for a position at Pennsylvania State University, where graduate student Peony Fhagen-Smith expanded Cross’ perspective to a lifespan perspective.〔()〕 More recently, Cross’ own daughter, Tuere Cross, has further expanded this line of research. While at Penn State, Cross assembled a research group that experimentally tested and validated the Cross-Racial-Identity-Scale (CRIS), which has become one of the most widely used social identity measures employed by the Division 45 scholars.〔()〕 The CRIS allows for the measurement and operationalization of identity-concept. Cross left Penn State in 2000 to become a part of the Social Personality Psychology Program at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY).〔()〕 In 2008, Cross was awarded emeritus status at CUNY, and he continues to serve on dissertation committees in social-personality and developmental psychology for doctoral students at the Graduate Center there.〔()〕
Cross briefly lived in Henderson, NV while he served as Counselor in Education at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.〔()〕 After retiring, Cross and his wife moved to Colorado, although Cross did not remain retired for long. He is the former Coordinator for the Higher Education Program in the Morgridge College of Education at the University of Denver.〔()〕 He also currently serves as the President Elect of the Division 45 (Society for the Psychological Study of Ethnic Minority Issues). In this role, Cross leads the American Psychological Association group to “encourage research on ethnic minority issues and () psychological knowledge to ethnic minority issues”.〔()〕 The American Psychological Association holds an annual convention, and Cross plans on attending the upcoming 2014 convention, which will take place in Washington D.C.〔()〕 At the convention, it is Cross’ goal to emphasize two key topics: (1) the mass incarceration of people of color, and (2) the lived experience of LGBT people of color.〔()〕 One of the major focuses of the Division 45 is highlighting the roles of women, gay and lesbians, and people with disabilities within the American Psychological Association. In a recent review, Cross commented, “I feel very fortunate to have lived the life I’ve led. I’ve been married for over 40 years, with a daughter who lives in Denver; so moving to Denver has reunited our family.” 〔()〕 In fact, Cross and his daughter have co-authored two different works, one on self-concept and the other employing a lifespan perspective to look at racial identity development. It has been rumored that Cross and his daughter may write a new article about the role of spirituality and personality development.〔()〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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