Travels with the Self


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About The Book

<p><em>Travels with the Self</em> uses a hermeneutic perspective to critique psychology and demonstrate why the concept of the self and the modality of cultural history are so vitally important to the profession of psychology. Each chapter focuses on a theory concept sociopolitical or professional issue philosophical problem or professional activity that has rarely been critiqued from a historical sociopolitical vantage point. </p><p>Philip Cushman explores psychology’s involvement in consumerism racism shallow understandings of being human military torture political resistance and digital living. In each case theories and practices are treated as historical artifacts rather than expressions of a putatively progressive modern-era science that is uncovering the one universal truth about human being. In this way psychological theories and practices especially pertaining to the concept of the self are shown to be reflections of the larger moral understandings and political arrangements of their time and place with implications for how we understand the self in theory and clinical practice.</p><p>Drawing on the philosophies of critical theory and hermeneutics Cushman insists on understanding the self one of the most studied and cherished of psychological concepts and its ills practitioners and healing technologies as historical/cultural artifacts — surprising almost sacrilegious concepts. To this end each chapter begins with a historical introduction that locates it in the historical time and moral/political space of the nation’s the profession’s and the author’s personal context.</p><p><i>Travels with the Self </i>brings together highly unusual and controversial writings on contemporary psychology that will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists psychologists of all stripes as well as scholars of philosophy history and cultural studies.</p>
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