Writings for a liberation psychology
By: Martin-Baro, Ignacio
Contributor(s): Aron, Adrianne; Ed | Corne, Shawn; Ed
Language: English Publisher: United States of America -- Harvard University Press -- 1996Description: xiv, 242pISBN: 9780674962477Subject(s): Social science | Social psychology | Latin AmericaDDC classification: 302.098 MAR/W Summary: Adrianne Aron and Shawn Corne's excellent introduction contextualizes the volume, both within the Salvadoran peasant communities with whom much of Martin-Baro's work was developed and within the academic/intellectual communities to whom it is addressed. The chapters are organized around three major themes, which are, arguably, the major dimensions along which Martin-Baro's work developed: political psychology, war and trauma, and "de-ideologizing" reality. The selections demonstrate his contributions to social psychology as well as his intense involvement in the social reality of his adoptive country, El Salvador ... [This is an] excellent volume. It is required reading for psychologists seeking a more critical psychology--one that takes responsibility for its social position and privilege, and challenges the status quo. It is an equally important resource for those who seek ideas and examples for developing "indigenous psychology" from the base of marginalized people's lives, in coalition with them. -- M. Brinton Lykes "World Psychology."Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Reference | Central Library Reference (Sahyadri Campus) | Reference | 302.098 HAR/W | Not for loan | 07889 |
Part 1 The psychology of politics and the politics of psychology:
*Toward a liberation psychology;
*The role of the psychologist;
*Power, politics, and personality;
*Political socialization - two critical themes;
*The political psychology of work.
Part 2 War and trauma:
*War and mental health;
*War and the psychosocial trauma of Salvadoran children;
*Religion as an instrument of psychological warfare;
*The psycholgical value of violent political repression.
Part 3 De-ideologizing reality:
*"The people" - toward an definition of a concept;
*Public opinion research as a de-ideologizing instrument;
*The lazy latino - the ideological nature of Latin-American fatalism.
Adrianne Aron and Shawn Corne's excellent introduction contextualizes the volume, both within the Salvadoran peasant communities with whom much of Martin-Baro's work was developed and within the academic/intellectual communities to whom it is addressed. The chapters are organized around three major themes, which are, arguably, the major dimensions along which Martin-Baro's work developed: political psychology, war and trauma, and "de-ideologizing" reality. The selections demonstrate his contributions to social psychology as well as his intense involvement in the social reality of his adoptive country, El Salvador ... [This is an] excellent volume. It is required reading for psychologists seeking a more critical psychology--one that takes responsibility for its social position and privilege, and challenges the status quo. It is an equally important resource for those who seek ideas and examples for developing "indigenous psychology" from the base of marginalized people's lives, in coalition with them. -- M. Brinton Lykes "World Psychology."