Lightfoot,
C., Lalonde, C. E., & Chandler,
M. J., (2004)
Changing Conceptions of Psychological
Life
Mahwah,
NJ: Laurence Erlbaum & Associates
Changing Conceptions of Psychological Life is an interdisciplinary
look at personal constructions of self. This book is a product of the
30th Annual Meeting of
the Jean Piaget Society. The contributing authors constitute the original cast
invited to speak on the theme of how individuals come to construe psychological
lives—their own and others. Their concerns are how our sense of ourselves
emerges developmentally, culturally, and historically, and the implications
such constructions have for personal, social, and political change. Together,
the authors compose an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars
well regarded for their work on topics as diverse as adolescence, language,
aging, romance, and morality. Creating a level of discourse about selves and
mind—and how they have been and should be studied—the volume is
broken down into four parts; Part I includes work that is principally concerned
with elevating
the position of our experience of ourselves in constructing who we are. The
next section focuses on the corrections presumed to exist between the conceptions
of self and the conceptions of mental life. Each chapter offers additional
information on the dynamics of temperament, attachment, personality, and regulation.
Part III is concerned with cultural contexts that frame developing conceptions
of self and mental life. Finally, the last section situates conceptions of
mental life directly and dramatically in the social contexts of their making.
Readers will find in these pages a programmatic effort variously attuned to
selves and minds as dynamic and structured, present and represented, felt and
known, non-languaged and storied, and embodied and theorized. The volume is
suitable for certain upper-level undergraduate and graduate seminars dealing
with clinical, cognitive, cultural, and developmental matters and sought out
by active researchers and practitioners in the field. [visit
Publisher's web site]
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Preface.
Part I: Self as Known and as Experienced
A. Blasi Neither Personality nor Cognition: An Alternative Approach
to the Nature of the Self.
D. Polkinghorne Ricoeur, Narrative, and Personal Identity.
L. Nucci The Promise and Limitations of the Moral Self Construct.
Part II: Self and Mind
A. Demetriou Unity and Modularity in the Mind and
the Self: Towards a General Theory.
J. Marcia, J. Carpendale Identity: Does Thinking Make
it So?
L. Moses, S. Carlson Self-Regulation and Children's
Theories of Mind.
Part III: Self, Mind, and Culture
D. Holland Self and Power in the
World of Romance: Extending Sociogenic Theories.
D. Moshman Theories
of Self and Theories of Selves: Identity in Rwanda.
C. Lalonde, M. Chandler
Culture, Selves, and Time: Theories of Personal Persistence in Native
and non-Native Youth. [preprint]
Part IV: The Social Construction of Self
T.R. Sarbin A Preface to the
Epistemology of Identity.
R. Harre The Social Construction of Persons.
A.O. Rorty Improvisatory
Accident-Prone Dramas of (What Passes for) a Person's Life.
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