ABSTRACT

Traditional social psychology assumes that the person has an already-existing nature that then becomes subject to the influence of the social environment. The Person in Social Psychology challenges this model, drawing on theories from micro-sociology and contemporary European social psychology to suggest a more 'social' re-framing of the person. In this book Vivien Burr has provided a radical new agenda for students of social psychology and sociology. Using concepts familiar to the social psychologist, such as norms, roles, demand characteristics and labelling, she argues for an understanding of the person where the social world is not a set of variables that affect a pre-existing individual, but is instead the arena where the person becomes formed.

chapter 2|30 pages

The social origins of behaviour

chapter 3|24 pages

Role-taking

chapter 4|26 pages

Groups and the social self

chapter 5|28 pages

Representations and language

chapter 6|20 pages

The person in social psychology