ABSTRACT

In the late 1960s a ‘crisis’ erupted in social psychology, with many social psychologists highly critical of the ‘old paradigm’, laboratory-experimental approach. Originally published in 1989, The Crisis in Modern Social Psychology was the first book to provide a clear account of the complex body of work that is critical of traditional social psychological approaches. Ian Parker insisted that the ‘crisis’ was not over, showing how attempts to improve social psychology had failed, and explaining why we need instead a political understanding of social interaction which links research with change.

Modern social psychology reflects the impact of structuralist and post-structuralist conceptual crises in other academic disciplines, and Parker describes the work of Foucault and Derrida sympathetically and lucidly, making these important debates accessible to the student and discussing their influence. He assesses the responses from both mainstream social psychology and from avant-garde textual social psychology to the influx of these radical ideas, and discusses the promises and pitfalls of a post-modern view of social action.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part One|60 pages

‘Crises'

chapter Chapter One|18 pages

The paradigm crisis

chapter Chapter Two|19 pages

The political crisis

chapter Chapter Three|19 pages

The conceptual crisis

part Two|59 pages

Responses

chapter Chapter Four|18 pages

Ordinary explanation

chapter Chapter Five|18 pages

Social representations

chapter Chapter Six|18 pages

Conversation

part Three|31 pages

Alternatives

chapter Chapter Seven|10 pages

Culture

chapter Chapter Eight|17 pages

Politics