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 13
... sense , we can understand the claim that ' Discourse analysis is implicit ideology critique , because the position of the researcher is reflexive ' ( Parker , 1992 : 40 ) . A related problem , reflecting also the marginalizing of ...
... sense , we can understand the claim that ' Discourse analysis is implicit ideology critique , because the position of the researcher is reflexive ' ( Parker , 1992 : 40 ) . A related problem , reflecting also the marginalizing of ...
Side 32
... sense of excluding and / or at the same time inventing ( by the abnormality that it implies ) that which has adopted the label ' feminine ' or ' referring to women ' . Unmasking this language game was the ' leitmotiv ' of the emergence ...
... sense of excluding and / or at the same time inventing ( by the abnormality that it implies ) that which has adopted the label ' feminine ' or ' referring to women ' . Unmasking this language game was the ' leitmotiv ' of the emergence ...
Side 35
... sense , and have produced an idea of human experience to be perfectly divided in two , mutually exclusive , worlds : the masculine world and the feminine world . In this way , feminism criticism has demonstrated how gender relationships ...
... sense , and have produced an idea of human experience to be perfectly divided in two , mutually exclusive , worlds : the masculine world and the feminine world . In this way , feminism criticism has demonstrated how gender relationships ...
Side 36
... sense , the attribution of effects generating social realities to discursive psychology ( Harré and Stearns , 1995 ) cannot be isolated from the simultaneous psychosocial restraint of the same social reality . In fact , the place or ...
... sense , the attribution of effects generating social realities to discursive psychology ( Harré and Stearns , 1995 ) cannot be isolated from the simultaneous psychosocial restraint of the same social reality . In fact , the place or ...
Side 37
... sense that negotiation is necessary for the very exercise of freedom . It is desirable to replace the logic of a single and autonomous identity with that of a dialogic and emergent self , from which one considers that interiority is ...
... sense that negotiation is necessary for the very exercise of freedom . It is desirable to replace the logic of a single and autonomous identity with that of a dialogic and emergent self , from which one considers that interiority is ...
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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