Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Critical Social Psychology: The Critical Context

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
5
Uploaded on
04-08-2023
Written in
2023/2024

This is a summary of the book chapter: Introduction to Critical Social Psychology by Alexa Hepburn. The chapter title is: The Critical Context. This document summarizes the content of this reading providing a comprehensive understanding. Additional definitions are also used to aid in the complexities of the reading.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

→ Virtually any piece of social psychology is critical of something even if it is just another piece of
research or another researcher.
→ What is distinctive about critical social psychology is the breadth of its critical concerns.
→ For critical social psychology, research is locked in with issues of politics, morality and social
change.
→ It starts from fundamental concerns with oppression, exploitation and human well-being.


• Critical of society (or some of its elements).
• Critical of psychology itself: asks questions about its assumptions, practices and its broader
influences.
• Critical of social psychology.
• Dual task of criticizing society and criticizing the discipline of psychology.
• The tension between these two projects provides CSP with its current character.

Critical thinking - the analysis of available facts, evidence, observations, and arguments in order to
form a judgement by the application of rational, skeptical, and unbiased analyses and evaluation.
Criticism – what you may have experienced when you had an exchange with someone and you felt
the feedback to be personal, destructive, vague, inexpert, ignorant, or even selfish.
Critique - impersonal, constructive, specific, expert, informed and selfless.



To highlight the way critical work is dependent on a range of assumptions that are not always made
explicit. Three groups of assumptions are most fundamental.
1. The first concerns the nature of society: how it works and how it can be changed.
2. The second concerns knowledge: how it changes, how it is justified, how ‘solid’ it is.
3. The third concerns the person: how personhood and subjectivity are understood.
• SOCIETY: race, class, gender
• KNOWLEDGE: psychology itself Understanding all these topics in our South African context
• SUBJECTIVITY: our “selves”



• Society- an obvious thing, something that we are part of and that exists ‘out there’.
→ But society is a relatively recent term; it is a theorized way of understanding, how people
collect together.
→ ‘Society’ is connected with an assortment of ideas and practices: social and political
institutions, the economy, social groups and classes, political procedures.
→ We can ‘see’ these things with the aid of a developed set of notions from social and political
science that have become part of our everyday currency.
→ One major alternative we could consider is culture- would emphasize the symbolic and ritual
side of human life.
TJW NOTES

, → For a critical social psychologist the problem with the notion of culture is its organic, timeless
connotations.
→ Society, with its associated thesaurus of notions, is a way of constructing stuff that makes it
more malleable, makes it something that can be transformed or overturned.


• One of the crucial things marking out different views of society is how they view individuals.
• Liberal models of society tend to take the individual as logically prior to society.
• Thus, society will be fair if it allows people the freedom to pursue their own goals.
• From a critical perspective, adopting a liberal view will lead to emphasis on tackling problems at
an individual level rather than focusing on political structures and institutions.
• The critical aim is the emancipation of the individual.
• Sees group processes as independent of broader political structures and institutions.
• Eg. Most social psychology texts.
• Critical social psychology is usually suspicious of the liberal individualist view of society.

LIBERALISM
⇒ an attitude characterized by acceptance of alternative, even noncompliant, forms of thinking or
acting and sometimes (but not necessarily or fully) by advocacy of change to the status quo and
tradition.
⇒ historically, a broad political philosophy emphasizing individual freedom, constitutional
government, and social progress through open debate and the pragmatic reform of existing
institutions and laws.



• Marxist theories of society emphasize the importance of historical change, and the centrality of
class conflict.
• In particular, social class is seen as a fundamental factor in making sense of social structures–
power relations are often understood in terms of class relations.
• From a Marxist perspective, to be critical and political necessarily involves particular ways of
making sense of social structures and institutions.
• The institutionally supported structures of power are often viewed as pre-discursive–they exist as
part of the ‘real’–so we can start to see how a theory of knowledge (e.g. realist versus relativist)
impacts on our understanding of society and social change.
• If social structures can simply exist outside our ways of making sense of them, we are forced into
thinking about personhood in particular ways.
• These tensions between what is individual and social, what is real and discursive, provide a great
deal of dynamism and debate for critical social psychologists.
• Society precedes the individual.


• A postmodern theory of society is a way of characterizing contemporary society and the
degeneration of capitalism and modernity.
• This emphasizes the importance of the move away from mass industrial production towards new
information-based technology in which control of communication is paramount.
• Focuses on language and communication.
• Unlike Marxism, critical analysis presupposes no primary political structures; unlike liberalism, the
individual is not assumed to be prior to social and institutional structures.
→ Sees social institutions as constituted through language.
TJW NOTES

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Course

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
1
Uploaded on
August 4, 2023
Number of pages
5
Written in
2023/2024
Type
SUMMARY

Subjects

$4.82
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
tiffanyjanewilton

Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
tiffanyjanewilton University of the Witwatersrand
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
3
Member since
5 year
Number of followers
2
Documents
32
Last sold
1 year ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions