Leading psychologist argues we need to revolutionise the discipline.
Ian Parker is Professor of Psychology in the Discourse Unit at Manchester Metropolitan University, where he is managing editor of Annual Review of Critical Psychology. He is a member of Psychology Politics Resistance, which is now part of the Asylum collective. He has produced seventeen books, including The Crisis in Modern Social Psychology, and How to End It (1989), Qualitative Psychology: Introducing Radical Research (2005) and Slavoj Zizek: A Critical Introduction (Pluto Press, 2004).
Acknowledgements
p. vi
Introduction
p. 1
What Is Psychology? Meet the Family
p. 9
Psychology as Ideology: Individualism Explained
p. 33
Psychology at Work: Observation and Regulation of Alienated Activity
p. 55
Pathologising Dissent: Exploitation Isolated and Ratified
Historical, Personal and Political: Psychology and Revolution
p. 147
Commonsense: Psychological Culture on the Left
p. 166
Elements of Opposition: Psychological Struggles Now
p. 184
Transitional Demands: Taking on Psychology
p. 200
What Next? Reading and Resources
p. 215
References
p. 222
Index
p. 258
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