Identities, Groups and Social Issues
Edited by:
- Margaret Wetherell - The Open University
August 1996 | 376 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
"This is a splendid book in which psychology goes public. Identities, Groups, and Social Issues provides an exciting discussion of how mental processes adapt to the complexities of social interaction in organized social groups. While psychological in emphasis, this volume never loses sight of the historical and political settings in which people live."
--Jerome Bruner, New York University
Identities, Groups, and Social Issues is a comprehensive and clear textbook on the social psychology of collective life. Covering groups (both small and large), social organizations and institutions, shared processes of sensemaking, representations and discourse, social norms, and social roles, this accessible overview guides the reader through these important theoretical and empirical developments in social psychology. The book has a strong historical focus, both following social psychological developments since the 1920s to the present day and discussing contemporary work in this historical context. The authors cover a representative mix of European and North American work, recognizing and explaining the plurality of perspectives in the discipline. It will be invaluable for all students and academics in social psychology.
Margaret Wetherell
Life Histories and Social Histories
Hedy Brown
Group Processes
Helen Morgan and Kerry Thomas
Group Processes
Jonathan Potter
Attitudes, Social Representations and Discourse
Margaret Wetherell
Intergroup Relations and the Social Psychology of Racism
Diane Watson
Individuals and Institutions
Very interesting and at the appropriate level for Foundation Degree learners. Social issues identified and addressed, this book links in well to the course content.
Education, City of Sunderland College
January 5, 2023
I have read this book and while I consider it to be helpful I was uncertain of its place within our current programme and reluctently have decided against adoption
Faculty of Social Science, Lincoln University
May 12, 2015
Good text for situating the individual within a wider context when examining systemic and social injustices.
Children, Young People and Families, Leeds Trinity University
January 21, 2015