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Resituating Humanistic Psychology
Finding Meaning in an Age of Medicalization, Digitization, and Identity Politics
Resituating Humanistic Psychology
Finding Meaning in an Age of Medicalization, Digitization, and Identity Politics
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Description
In Resituating Humanistic Psychology, Patrick Whitehead and Miles Groth urge psychologists to return to the aims and goals of psychology as it first emerged. Illustrating how the field has veered from its initial conception, Whitehead and Groth trace its growth from the late 1800s to the humanistic revolution of the 1960s to the current period of social unrest. Whitehead and Groth touch on Wilhelm Wundt’s and William James’s vision for the field; the lasting changes made to clinical psychology, methods of investigation, and psychology of learning in the 1960s; and the effects of isolation, extreme connectivity, and social politics on psychology today. This book is recommended for scholars and students of psychology, history, and philosophy.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2: The Early Promise of Psychology
Chapter 3: A Nation Ill-at-ease: The Precursors to 1960s Humanistic Revolution
Chapter 4: Insights for Research and Education from the Humanistic Movement in Psychology
Chapter 5: From Talking Cure to Psychotherapy: A History of the Helping Profession
Chapter 6: May the Force be With You: Humanistic Contributions to Psychotherapy
Chapter 7: Scientific Precursors to the Second Humanistic Revolution
Chapter 8: The Fundamentals of Existentialism
Chapter 9: Psychopathologization
Chapter 10: Identity Politics
Chapter 11: Resituating Psychology in the Humanities
Product details
| Published | May 20 2019 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 234 |
| ISBN | 9781498591010 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Illustrations | 1 b/w illustrations; |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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“Weaving rigorous critical examination with reflexivity and intimacy, Whitehead and Groth solidly demonstrate that, far from being a historical relic, humanistic approaches in psychology and psychotherapy are primed to tackle the polarizations that bitterly characterize the early 21st century—corporate medicalization, scientism, and impersonal dissemination of facts in education on one hand; paternalism and identity politics on the other.”
Andrew Bland, Millersville University
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