000 | 01593nam a22002057a 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c2397 _d2397 |
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001 | 1528 | ||
003 | OSt | ||
005 | 20190312115234.0 | ||
008 | 161121b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a0-7619-5288-8 | ||
040 | _cUM Bansalan College LIC | ||
082 |
_aBCir. 302 _bC869 |
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100 |
_98753 _aIbaƱez, Tomas |
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245 | _aCritical social psychology/ | ||
260 |
_a--London: _bSAGE Publications, _cc1997. |
||
300 |
_ax, 304p.: _bill.; _c23.3cm. |
||
500 | _aIncludes index. | ||
505 | _aContents. --1. Introduction. --2. Why a Critical Social Psychology? --3. Going Critical?. --4. Discourse and Critical Social Psychology. --5. Does Critical Social Psychology Mean the End of the World. --6. Laying the Ground for a Common Critical Psychology. --7. Postmodernism, Postmodernity and Social Psychology. --8. And So Say All of Us?: Some Thoughts on 'Experiential Democratization' as an Aim for Critical Social Psychology. --9. Discourses, Structures and Analysis: What Practices? In Which Contexts. --10. The Unconscious States of Social Psychology. --11. Postmodernity, Subjectivity and the Media. --12. Prioritizing the Political: Feminist Psychology. --13. Reflexively Recycling Social Psychology: A Critical Autobiographical Account of an Evolving Critical social Psychological Analysis of Social Psychology. --14. Differentiating and De-developing Critical Social Psychology. --15. Critical Social Psychology: Identity and De-prioritization of the Social. --16. What Scientists Do. --17. Participant Status in Social Psychological Research. | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cBC |