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Modernizing the mind : psychological knowledge and the remaking of society

Author: Steven C Ward
Publisher: Westport, Conn. : Praeger, 2002.
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
When did fidgety children begin to suffer from attention deficit disorder? How did frightened people come to be called paranoid? Why are we considered to have emotional intelligence and not simply caring personalities? While psychological knowledge began in the relative isolation of laboratories and universities, it has since permeated various professions, institutions, and everyday life. Society and our conceptions  Read more...
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Additional Physical Format: Online version:
Ward, Steven C.
Modernizing the mind.
Westport, Conn. : Praeger, 2002
(OCoLC)606855932
Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: Steven C Ward
ISBN: 0275974502 9780275974503
OCLC Number: 49647879
Description: viii, 279 p. ; 24 cm.
Contents: How truth travels : knowledge, networks, and the organization of society --
From a moral philosophy to a science : the struggle to construct and defend the "new psychology" --
For the children : the alliance of psychology and education --
Molding morals and minds : psychology and the modernization of parenting --
Minds, measures, and machines : the materialization of psychological ideas --
A séance or a science? : psychology and its publics --
Psychological codes of civility and the practice of everyday life --
The psychologically examined life : issues, healing, closure, and the psychotherapeutic self --
Conclusiong : The psychologization of the United States --
Appendix : A few important dates in the history of American psychology.
Responsibility: Steven C. Ward.

Abstract:

When did fidgety children begin to suffer from attention deficit disorder? How did frightened people come to be called paranoid? Why are we considered to have emotional intelligence and not simply caring personalities? While psychological knowledge began in the relative isolation of laboratories and universities, it has since permeated various professions, institutions, and everyday life. Society and our conceptions of self have fundamentally changed with psychology's modernization of the mind. Ward provides a social and cultural history of the spread of psychological knowledge, assessing the way this proliferation has reconfigured society's meaning, and the way people view themselves and others. Using ideas borrowed from science and technology studies, the sociology of culture, and the sociology of organizations, Ward examines how American psychology established itself as the central purveyor of truth about the mind and self in the 20th century. He examines how psychology has essentially become common knowledge, and his innovative account offers a novel theory about the growth and influence of numerous different knowledge forms. --From publisher's description.

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Linked Data


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