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 20
... discipline ( de la Rey , 1997 ) . This is very different from psychological practice in most industrialized countries , where the claims to social efficacy are largely rhetorical , or certainly more indirect . The authors discuss their ...
... discipline ( de la Rey , 1997 ) . This is very different from psychological practice in most industrialized countries , where the claims to social efficacy are largely rhetorical , or certainly more indirect . The authors discuss their ...
Side 21
... discipline that for better or worse will play a significant part in its future . However , what a feminist psychology might be in the context of such differences of privilege as well as culture between women remains at best unclear ...
... discipline that for better or worse will play a significant part in its future . However , what a feminist psychology might be in the context of such differences of privilege as well as culture between women remains at best unclear ...
Side 24
... discipline . This book therefore joins with the emerging body of feminist literature that calls for a deconstruction of ' imperial feminism ' ( Amos and Parmar , 1984 ) and demands that we think through , not simply connections between ...
... discipline . This book therefore joins with the emerging body of feminist literature that calls for a deconstruction of ' imperial feminism ' ( Amos and Parmar , 1984 ) and demands that we think through , not simply connections between ...
Side 25
... discipline , and to work across traditional professional boundaries in order to counter psychology's injustices to all women . Equally , using what ' inside ' knowledge we have to critique the discipline , including our own ...
... discipline , and to work across traditional professional boundaries in order to counter psychology's injustices to all women . Equally , using what ' inside ' knowledge we have to critique the discipline , including our own ...
Side 30
... disciplines ( history , sociology , anthropology , philosophy , geography , etc. ) rather than psychology which have sought to bring the question of women out into the open . These disciplines have not worked , however , so much in ...
... disciplines ( history , sociology , anthropology , philosophy , geography , etc. ) rather than psychology which have sought to bring the question of women out into the open . These disciplines have not worked , however , so much in ...
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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