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Defining Principles

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Title: Defining Principles


1
The Socio-Cultural Approach
  • Defining Principles

2
Volkerpsychologie
  • German Psychology of Peoples
  • A comparative and historical, social and
    cultural psychology dealing with the cultural
    products (language, myth, custom etc) resulting
    from social interaction.
  • Dominated from 18th to 20th century
  • Central assumption importance of the cultural
    and linguistic community in which the formation
    and education of the individual personality takes
    place.
  • Language is the medium through which a community
    shapes its individual members, who then actively
    contribute to that language, which is thus a
    social product. (Markova , 1983)

3
National identity and Germany
  • Today we tend to talk about society as a social
    context which shapes experiences and the
    individual but Volkerpsychogie focused more on
    national and cultural community
  • Volkerpsychologie raised many questions of
    national importance relating to politics of the
    time in Germany.

4
Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
  • founding father of experimental psychology
  • practiced introspection- looking inwards to
    analyse mental life as it happened
  • realised this was subjective mental events are
    expressed or communicated and possibly shaped by
    language
  • believed that an adequate study of mind should
    start by examining its major objectifications,
    such as language, myth and custom and account for
    their cultural and historical variations
  • believed that experimental psychology of the
    decontextualised subject must be complemented
    by a study of the major manifestations of mind.

5
Growth of Social Psychology
  • began to forget the cultural element of
    Volkpsychologie
  • worked on becoming more empirical in its methods
    (social experiments) rather than focusing on
    qualitative data collection
  • construction of meaning aspect handed over to
    sociology, anthropology etc.
  • Recently rediscovered by European social
    psychologists
  • Wundts final belief that experimental psychology
    is only half of what psychology can be is finding
    more and more supporters, (Hewstone and Stroebe,
    2001).

6
Carmichael, Hogan and Walter (1932)
  • An experiment to try for yourselves to
    demonstrate that language shapes thinking.
  • hogan and carmichael sheet.pdf

7
Ludwig Wittgenstein
The limits of my language mean the limits of my
world
8
Language shapes thinking
  • Pormpuraaw a small Aboriginal community on the
    western edge of Cape York, in northern Australia
  • the Kuuk Thaayorre have no words for left and
    right and instead use the compass points at all
    times dependent upon their spatial orientation
  • http//www.edge.org/3rd_culture/boroditsky09/borod
    itsky09_index.html

9
Language shapes thinking
  • English speakers tend to talk about time using
    horizontal spatial metaphors
  • "The best is ahead of us,"
  • "The worst is behind us
  • Mandarin speakers have a vertical metaphor for
    time
  • the next month is the "down month"
  • the last month is the "up month".
  • Mandarin speakers talk about time vertically more
    often than English speakers do, so do Mandarin
    speakers think about time vertically more often
    than English speakers do?

10
Language shapes thinking
  • English speakers prefer to talk about duration in
    terms of length
  • "That was a short talk,"
  • "The meeting didn't take long
  • Spanish and Greek speakers prefer to talk about
    time in terms of amount, relying more on words
    like "much" "big", and "little"
  • If you show English speakers a line on a screen
    they are likely to confuse how long they saw it
    for based on how long the line was this doesn't
    happen for Spanish/Greek speakers but the effect
    does happen if you show them a shape of differing
    size!
  • If you teach English speakers to describe time in
    same way as Spanish or teach Spanish to describe
    time like English, then they begin making similar
    errors as native speakers demonstrating that
    language does affect thinking.

11
Crowd/Mob Psychology,Le Bon.(1895)
  • The study of the mind and behaviour of masses and
    crowds the experience of individuals in such
    crowds.
  • Where did these ideas stem from?
  • Hypnosis
  • Bacteriology
  • Criminology

12
Hypnosis and social influence
  • Anton Mesmer had discovered that he could put
    people into a trance a lowered state of
    consciousness.
  • argued that this rendered the mind more primitive
    and open to suggestion.
  • developed by Scotsman James Braid who coined the
    term hypnosis from the Greek god of sleep
    Hypnos
  • used for both diagnostic and treatment purposes
  • revealed as a model of social influence
  • Led to interest in social situations which can
    lead to similar primitive state
  • People began to think that when people are in
    crowds they are influenced to become more
    irrational, primitive and emotional.

13
Bacteriology
  • Medical breakthroughs by 19th century scientists
    demonstrated the process of bacteriological
    contagion.
  • Influenced thinking about the spread of
    affect/emotion in crowds social or mental
    contagion
  • also the spread of anomie (term used by
    sociologist Durkheim a state in which dominant
    social norms are questioned, ignored or
    rejected)

14
Criminology
  • Ideas stemmed also from the field of criminology
    diminished responsibility subconscious and
    affective state of mind of the individual
    submerged in the crowd.
  • In the crowd the individual becomes...
  • more primitive
  • more infantile
  • less intelligent
  • less guided by reason
  • less responsible

15
Social/political climate
  • threats to the established political, social and
    moral order
  • the masses were feared and thought responsible
    for social evils
  • science was required to analyse what was going on
    and eventually learn to control the masses.
  • Medical/criminal model was popular.

16
American Social Psychology
  • Allport the science that studies the behaviour
    of the individual in so far as his behaviour
    stimulates other individuals or is itself a
    reaction to this behaviour.
  • social psychology became more experimental
    enhanced credibility/funding
  • began to divide Pps from the social context again
  • move away from the study of social issues until
    economic and political crises such as the great
    depression and WW2
  • Attitude measurement and change measurement
    helped enhance scientific status
  • But social psychology called to account in 70s as
    having lost sight of social meaningfulness and
    social relevance methods over problems

17
Society for the psychological study of social
issues
  • 1930s and 1940s
  • Social psychologists in the free countries not
    only helped try to win the war but planned for a
    better world of democratic societies.
  • Kurt Lewin (Jewish refugee from Berlin), came up
    with idea of field theory focused on group
    dynamics the primacy of the whole
    interdependence.
  • Worked with groups to change conduct, morale,
    prejudice, style of leadership etc.
  • Developed action research

18
Euro-American Social Psychology
  • Heider social psychology of interpersonal
    relations, consistency and attribution
  • Many American Social psychologists (e.g. Sherif
    and Asch) had emigrated from Europe
  • ideas became Americanised as they attempted to
    fit into American society.
  • Social behaviour and interaction became less
    interesting than social cognition the cognitive
    representation of this of social interaction

19
Social psychology in post war Europe
  • Henri Tajfel and Serge Moscovici campaigned for a
    more social social psychology
  • the cultural ethos of self contained
    individualism having shaped the discipline beyond
    recognition of its original conception.
  • Tajfels interests
  • degree to which experience and behaviour are
    embedded in and shaped by the properties of the
    culture and society we live in
  • Social psychology can and must include ...
  • a direct concern with the relationship between
    human psychological functioning and the large
    scale social processes and events which shape
    this functioning and are shaped by it. (Tajfel
    1981).
  • Studied ...
  • stereotypes, prejudice, intergroup behaviour,
    social influence, minorities, and social
    representations

20
Full circle!
  • Growing concern for language and its role in
    interpersonal and intergroup communication
  • Social construction of a shared reality asking
    questions about how individuals construct a
    common reality (shared beliefs, norms, values,
    expectations, norms, roles socialisation
    process)
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