ABSTRACT

This important book fills two interrelated gaps in the field of psychology, first by developing a Marxist orientation to psychology and second by explaining how psychological pioneer Lev Vygotsky contributed greatly to this trend. Through outlining core principles in Marxist psychology, the book offers a framework for continuing Vygotsky’s Marxist legacy in new areas of the field. 

This book first documents the neglect in Vygotskyian studies of his deep use of Marxist concepts, and then subsequent chapters overcome this neglect. They explain the use of many Marxist concepts in his theoretical and methodological writings, demonstrating how Vygotsky utilized specific Marxist meanings in his work on consciousness, signs, development, imagination, creativity, secondary language acquisition, and unit of analysis. Chapters also address how Vygotsky dealt with incompatible theories and methodologies, illustrating how Marxist and Vygotskyian psychology can grow from anti-Marxist, anti-Vygotskyian approaches to psychology, such as psychoanalysis.

This book marks an original contribution to the field of psychology, offering a new understanding of both Vygotsky’s work and cultural and Marxist psychology. Furthermore, it expands the field of Marxism to include psychology. It will be of interest to all students and researchers of cultural, educational, and developmental psychology as well as the history of psychology. It will also appeal to social theorists and Marxist scholars.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

Recovering and advancing Vygotsky's Marxist psychology

chapter 1|82 pages

Marxist Psychology, Vygotsky's Cultural Psychology, and Psychoanalysis

The double helix of science and politics

chapter 4|14 pages

The Germ Cell of Vygotsky's Science

chapter 6|12 pages

Imagination and Creative Activity

Ontological and epistemological principles of Vygotsky's contributions

chapter 7|17 pages

Materialist Dialectics in Vygotsky's Methodological Framework

Implications for applied linguistics research

chapter 8|15 pages

Constructionist Interpretation of Vygotsky

A theoretical–methodological study of the concept of language