ABSTRACT

This challenging book critically examines three forms of contemporary psychology, all displaying various signs of crisis, through analogy with humour associated with three different class perspectives: mainstream psychology; critical psychology; and postpsychology.

By fusing the best of the three psychologies with political and cultural critiques, the book poses the question: what if class conflict and the crises of psychology are related? This is precisely the Gordian Knot which Fozooni tries to untangle. First, the author demonstrates how psychology has traditionally veered towards either an upper-class or a middle-class paradigm. With the demise of these two old paradigms a new understanding of psychology is gradually emerging - a postpsychology. Describing how ‘mainstream’ and ‘critical’ psychologies are undergoing late-life crisis, and ‘postpsychology’ is experiencing its birth pangs in an environment hostile to its existence, the book provides an alternative narrative of psychology. The author suggests that whilst all three forms of psychology have contributed to our self-comprehension, it is only postpsychology that possesses the attributes necessary for a global remaking of humanity.

Tackling the discipline of psychology head-on, Fozooni pits against it a series of scathing yet tongue-in-cheek critiques, making this fascinating and provocative reading for all students and academics interested in psychology, as well as the general reader.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|92 pages

Mainstream psychology as upper-class prescriptions

chapter 1|21 pages

Freud and social class

chapter 2|19 pages

Hirschfeld, class and sexuality

chapter 3|18 pages

Watsonian capitalism

chapter 4|17 pages

Maslow and peak capitalism

chapter 5|15 pages

Carl Rogers

The bolo tie ‘internationalist’

part II|91 pages

Critical psychology as middle-class musings

chapter 6|17 pages

Viktor Emil Frankl

The inconvenient existentialist

chapter 7|15 pages

Ronald David Laing

The naughty existentialist

chapter 8|19 pages

For Foucault’s sake!

chapter 9|19 pages

Billig

The sultan of critical psychology

chapter 10|19 pages

Parker and critical psychology

OK, now what?

part III|131 pages

Postpsychology and working-class stutterings

chapter 12|14 pages

Joseph Dietzgen

(One of) our philosophers

chapter 13|16 pages

Alfred Sohn-Rethel and rabid capitalism

chapter 14|16 pages

Erich Fromm and postpsychology

chapter 16|16 pages

Lev Vygotsky is postpsychology!

chapter 17|17 pages

Bakhtin completes Vygotsky

chapter 19|10 pages

Discussion