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Reflecting the many contributions of Muzafer Sherif to social psychology during the past thirty years, this volume presents selections from among Sherif's most widely known essays and provides a systematic overview of his evolving interests, concepts, methods and research findings. Twenty-five essays are divided into five sections according to content; the theoretical and methodological problems at the heart of Sherif's work; the experimental model for interaction process and products; problems of self and reference groups; concepts, attitudes and ego-involvements; and contributions to…mehr
Reflecting the many contributions of Muzafer Sherif to social psychology during the past thirty years, this volume presents selections from among Sherif's most widely known essays and provides a systematic overview of his evolving interests, concepts, methods and research findings. Twenty-five essays are divided into five sections according to content; the theoretical and methodological problems at the heart of Sherif's work; the experimental model for interaction process and products; problems of self and reference groups; concepts, attitudes and ego-involvements; and contributions to problems of in-group and intergroup relations through experimental and field research. Though the selections range over a broad spectrum each is characterized by the precise and incisive work techniques Sherif devised as well as by its intrinsic relevance to significant issues. Sherif writes to clarify theory, to define conceptual tools, and to use tools and theory to demonstrate the substantive results of his researches. Each research finding is added to its predecessors as the author advances to his goal of a social psychology that is consistent as it moves from the most basic psychological processes to the complexities of individual involvement in collective activity
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Introduction I: Interdisciplinary Relations and Methodology One: If Basic Research is To have Bearing on Actualities . . . Two: Social Psychology, Anthropology, and The "Behavioral Sciences" Three: Social Psychology: Problems and Trends in Interdisciplinary Relationships Four: The "Institutional" vs. "Behavioral" Controversy in Social Science, with Special Reference to Political Science Five: Analysis of The Social Situation II: Experimental Models for Social Interaction Six: Some Social Factors in Perception: The Orientation Seven: Formation of Social Norms: The Experimental Paradigm Eight: Differential Influence: Process Underlying Social Attitude Nine: The Psychology of Slogans Ten: Conformity-Deviation, Norms, and Group Relations Eleven: A Study in Ego Functioning: Elimination of Stable Anchorages in Individual and Group Relations III: The Self and Reference Groups Twelve: The Self and Reference Groups: Meeting Ground of Individual and Group Approaches Thirteen: The Problem of Inconsistency in Intergroup Relations Fourteen: The Adolescent in His Group in Its Setting Fourteen: The Adolescent in His Group in its Setting IV: Concepts, Attitudes, and Ego-Involvement Fifteen: Some Social-Psychological Aspects of Conceptual Functioning Sixteen: Some Needed Concepts in The Study of Attitudes: Latitudes of Acceptance, Rejection, and Noncommitment Seventeen: The Social Judgment-Involvement Approach to Attitude and Attitude Change Eighteen: The Own Categories Procedure in Attitude Research V: Experimental and Field Research: Man in In-Group and Intergroup Relations Nineteen: The Necessity of Considering Current Issues as Part and Parcel of Persistent Major Problems Twenty: Integrating Field Work and Laboratory in Small Group Research Twenty-One Experimental Study of Intergroup Relations Twenty-Two Approach, Hypotheses, and General Design of Intergroup Experiments Twenty-Three Superordinate Goals in The Reduction of Intergroup Conflict Twenty-Four Creative Alternatives to A Deadly Showdown Twenty-Five Conflict and Cooperation Between Functionally Related Groups
Introduction I: Interdisciplinary Relations and Methodology One: If Basic Research is To have Bearing on Actualities . . . Two: Social Psychology, Anthropology, and The "Behavioral Sciences" Three: Social Psychology: Problems and Trends in Interdisciplinary Relationships Four: The "Institutional" vs. "Behavioral" Controversy in Social Science, with Special Reference to Political Science Five: Analysis of The Social Situation II: Experimental Models for Social Interaction Six: Some Social Factors in Perception: The Orientation Seven: Formation of Social Norms: The Experimental Paradigm Eight: Differential Influence: Process Underlying Social Attitude Nine: The Psychology of Slogans Ten: Conformity-Deviation, Norms, and Group Relations Eleven: A Study in Ego Functioning: Elimination of Stable Anchorages in Individual and Group Relations III: The Self and Reference Groups Twelve: The Self and Reference Groups: Meeting Ground of Individual and Group Approaches Thirteen: The Problem of Inconsistency in Intergroup Relations Fourteen: The Adolescent in His Group in Its Setting Fourteen: The Adolescent in His Group in its Setting IV: Concepts, Attitudes, and Ego-Involvement Fifteen: Some Social-Psychological Aspects of Conceptual Functioning Sixteen: Some Needed Concepts in The Study of Attitudes: Latitudes of Acceptance, Rejection, and Noncommitment Seventeen: The Social Judgment-Involvement Approach to Attitude and Attitude Change Eighteen: The Own Categories Procedure in Attitude Research V: Experimental and Field Research: Man in In-Group and Intergroup Relations Nineteen: The Necessity of Considering Current Issues as Part and Parcel of Persistent Major Problems Twenty: Integrating Field Work and Laboratory in Small Group Research Twenty-One Experimental Study of Intergroup Relations Twenty-Two Approach, Hypotheses, and General Design of Intergroup Experiments Twenty-Three Superordinate Goals in The Reduction of Intergroup Conflict Twenty-Four Creative Alternatives to A Deadly Showdown Twenty-Five Conflict and Cooperation Between Functionally Related Groups
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