ISBN:
9780415721608
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (329 p)
Series Statement:
Explorations in Social Psychology
Series Statement:
Explorations in Social Psychology Ser.
Parallel Title:
Print version Discursive Psychology : Classic and contemporary issues
DDC:
302.01
Keywords:
Discursive psychology
;
Electronic books
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
Discursive Psychology is the first collection to systematically and critically appraise the influence and development of its foundational studies, exploring central concepts in social psychology such as attitudes, gender, cognition, memory, prejudice, and ideology. The book explores how discursive psychology has accommodated and responded to assumptions contained in classic studies, discussing what can still be gained from a dialogue with these inquiries, and which epistemological and methodological debates are still running, or are worth reviving.International contributors look back at the or
Description / Table of Contents:
Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of illustrations; List of contributors; Acknowledgments; Introduction: the evolution of discursive psychology: From classic to contemporary themes; PART I Epistemology and method; 1 Interpretative repertoires, conversation analysis and being critical; 2 Hitting ontological rock bottom: Discursive psychology's respecification of the realism/relativism debate; 3 Conversation analysis and discursive psychology: Taking up the challenge of Sacks' legacy; 4 Natural and contrived data; 5 Questions of context: Qualitative interviews as a source of knowledge
Description / Table of Contents:
PART II Cognition, emotion and the psychological thesaurus6 What happened to post-cognitive psychology?; 7 From Loughborough with love: How discursive psychology rocked the heart of social psychology's love affair with attitudes; 8 Discursive psychology and emotion; 9 Recasting the psychologist's question: Children's talk as social action; 10 Seeing the inside from the outside of children's minds: Displayed understanding and interactional competence; 11 From script theory to script formulation: Derek Edwards' shift from perceptual-realism to the interactional-rhetorical
Description / Table of Contents:
PART III Social categories, identity and memory12 Reorienting categories as a members' phenomena; 13 Some relevant things about gender and other categories in discursive psychology; 14 Dilemmas of memory: The mind is not a tape recorder; 15 A forgotten legacy? Towards a discursive psychology of the media; PART IV Prejudice, racism and nationalism; 16 Re-theorizing prejudice in social psychology: From cognition to discourse; 17 'Race stereotypes' as 'racist' discourse; 18 Fact and evaluation in racist discourse revisited
Description / Table of Contents:
19 Banal nationalism, postmodernism and capitalism: Revisiting Billig's critique of RortyIndex
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
URL:
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