Deconstructing Feminist PsychologyErica Burman SAGE, 14. nov. 1997 - 224 sider How close is feminist psychology to contemporary feminism? How can feminist psychological practice address issues of `difference′ between women in meaningful ways? What price has feminist psychology had to pay for attempting to engage with mainstream psychology to revise and improve it? This book critiques feminist practice within psychology, and reflects the diversity from across the globe of feminist struggles around psychology. An international group of key feminist psychologists explore the relations between feminist politics and psychological practices in: transitional and postcolonial contexts; the distinct European traditions of critical psychology and women′s studies; and psychology′s colonial `centre′ in the United States. Issues of `race′, class and sexuality figure centrally in the discussions around the politics of feminist practice in psychology. |
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Side v
... Identity Lenora Fulani 8 Towards a Communicative Feminist Psychology Gordana Jovanović 9 Through a Lens , Darkly Ann Levett and Amanda Kottler Index vi vii 1 30 30 47 61 90 115 115 140 159 184 206 — — — - — — Acknowledgements To the ...
... Identity Lenora Fulani 8 Towards a Communicative Feminist Psychology Gordana Jovanović 9 Through a Lens , Darkly Ann Levett and Amanda Kottler Index vi vii 1 30 30 47 61 90 115 115 140 159 184 206 — — — - — — Acknowledgements To the ...
Side ix
... identity issues ( race , gender , sexuality ) and definitional problems ( sexual and racial harassment / violence ) ... identities from the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona , Catalonia , Spain in 1991. She has been teaching social ...
... identity issues ( race , gender , sexuality ) and definitional problems ( sexual and racial harassment / violence ) ... identities from the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona , Catalonia , Spain in 1991. She has been teaching social ...
Side 1
... identities are reproduced within a model of woman that thereby threatens to become just as homogenizing and coercive as the model of man it claimed to challenge . It is the ( actual and potential ) reproduction of these exclusions that ...
... identities are reproduced within a model of woman that thereby threatens to become just as homogenizing and coercive as the model of man it claimed to challenge . It is the ( actual and potential ) reproduction of these exclusions that ...
Side 3
... identities . In doing this it remains allied with , or functions as a variety of , psychology and could thus be read ... identity to gender , it is in danger of ignoring how other marginalized positions enter into experiences of gender ...
... identities . In doing this it remains allied with , or functions as a variety of , psychology and could thus be read ... identity to gender , it is in danger of ignoring how other marginalized positions enter into experiences of gender ...
Side 10
... identities , including categories of political identities and including the type of identity politics that characterized Anglo - US feminisms of the 1970s to 1980s . Given that it 10 Deconstructing Feminist Psychology.
... identities , including categories of political identities and including the type of identity politics that characterized Anglo - US feminisms of the 1970s to 1980s . Given that it 10 Deconstructing Feminist Psychology.
Innhold
1 | |
30 | |
3 Rethinking Role Theory and its Aftermath | 47 |
4 The Reciprocity of Psychology and Popular Culture | 61 |
Sidestepping and Sandbagging | 90 |
Part II From Deconstruction to Reconstruction | 115 |
7 Moving Beyond Morality and Identity | 140 |
8 Towards a Communicative Feminist Psychology | 159 |
9 Through a Lens Darkly | 184 |
Index | 206 |
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