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Critical Theories of Psychological Development

✍ Scribed by John M. Broughton (auth.), John M. Broughton (eds.)


Publisher
Springer US
Year
1987
Tongue
English
Leaves
331
Series
Path in Psychology
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Something instructive occurred in the process of entitling the present collection. Both editor and publisher sought a simple and succinct rubric for the various pieces of work. But they rapidly and reluctantly reached the consensus that, by either intellectual or marketing criteria, the inserΒ­ tion of the adjective "psychological" to qualify the noun "development" was a communicative necessity. Much to the chagrin of the developΒ­ mental psychologist, the term development still connotes-to the world at large as well as the general community of publishers, librarians, and computer archivists-the modernization of nation states. Inside and outside the university, I find that, when asked, "What are you inΒ­ terested in?" I am not at liberty to reply, "The concept of development," without being absorbed immediately into a discussion of Third World studies. The approach of the present volume should be taken as an exhortation to psychologists to take the genealogy of "development'' seriously. The history of the discipline is not so different from the histoΒ­ ry of the word and, as we shall discover, the concern with developmenΒ­ tal progress cannot easily be separated from the urge for dominion. This volume presents a selection from the recent critical scholarship on psychological development. The emphasis is on rethinking the field of developmental psychology at the level of theory.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xxiv
An Introduction to Critical Developmental Psychology....Pages 1-30
The Rationalization of Infancy....Pages 31-59
The Difficulty of Being a Child in French-Speaking Countries....Pages 61-86
No Laughing Matter....Pages 87-125
The Illusion of Maturation in an Age of Decline....Pages 127-148
Critical Psychology and the Development of Motivation as Historical Process....Pages 149-175
Psychoanalysis and Ideology....Pages 177-210
The Decline of the Oedipus Complex....Pages 211-244
Piaget, Adorno, and Dialectical Operations....Pages 245-274
The Development of the Self....Pages 275-301
Postscript....Pages 303-306
Back Matter....Pages 307-313

✦ Subjects


Cognitive Psychology; Personality and Social Psychology


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