Social PsychologyA basic introduction to the field, Social Psychology, Eighth Edition takes a critical, symbolic, interactionist approach and helps students understand the very nature of how individuals do things together in today?'s society. The book has been significantly revised and takes into consideration a number of the recent turns in the field: the increased sense that American social psychology is deeply embedded in a world culture; that postmodernism has much to offer the study of the social world; and that new theories on sexuality, identity, deviance, and the body provide a fascinating viewpoint on the person within society. Now in paperback to be more affordable to students, Social Psychology, 8th Edition provides a distinctive alternative for the professor of social psychology. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 40
Page 278
... ence group is thus any group with which people psychologically identify themselves , or in relation to which they think of them- selves . Implicit in this idea is that their exist- ing group memberships may be relatively meaningless to ...
... ence group is thus any group with which people psychologically identify themselves , or in relation to which they think of them- selves . Implicit in this idea is that their exist- ing group memberships may be relatively meaningless to ...
Page 364
... ence in the modern sense , although one may say that it was a near miss . The Greeks are said to have invented logic , and from them we inherited the phonetic alphabet , which revolutionized communication and made Greece perhaps the ...
... ence in the modern sense , although one may say that it was a near miss . The Greeks are said to have invented logic , and from them we inherited the phonetic alphabet , which revolutionized communication and made Greece perhaps the ...
Page 369
... ence this disease . Some are necessary ; others may be present or absent when the disease occurs . A cause , or causal process , in contrast is both necessary and sufficient in that it is al- ways present and guarantees the effect . A ...
... ence this disease . Some are necessary ; others may be present or absent when the disease occurs . A cause , or causal process , in contrast is both necessary and sufficient in that it is al- ways present and guarantees the effect . A ...
Contents
Relevant issues and criticisms | 7 |
Interpretive social psychologies | 13 |
Conclusions | 25 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actions activity addiction adult alcohol American animals aphasia awareness context become biological body career cause cerned child chimpanzees cial cocaine communication complex concept criminal culture death defined degradation ceremonies deviant discussion disease drug dying emotional ence example experience feel Freudian gender guage havior heterosexual homosexual human behavior hypnosis hypnotic ical identity indi individual interac interaction interactionist involved language linguistic live malaria male mass media Masters and Johnson meaning ment moral motives nature objects occur one's organization pain patient person perspective political Press problems reference group rela relations relationships riences ritual role selective inattention self-conceptions sense sexual signs situation social psychology social structure social worlds society Sociobiology sociological speech stage Strauss suggests symbolic symbolic interactionism symbolic interactionist talk theory thought tion tional tive types viduals words York