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Paperback This Changes Everything: The Relational Revolution in Psychology Book

ISBN: 0312426151

ISBN13: 9780312426156

This Changes Everything: The Relational Revolution in Psychology

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

In 1977, Carol Gilligan published the essay "In a Different Voice" describing the discrepancy in morality and self-expression between men and women. In a radical break with the Freudian school that dominated psychology, Gilligan and her peers went on to identify relationships rather than the notion of "self" as the foundation of our psychological and physical states. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Christina Robb recounts the untold efforts of a pioneering group of psychologists--Carol Gilligan, Jean Baker Miller, and Judith Lewis Herman--whose groundbreaking work really did change everything.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

You won't be able to put it down... and then you'll give it to your friends!

This is one of the best books that I have read in a long time. Part intellectual history, this book traces the work of Jean Baker Miller, Carol Gilligan and others who revolutionized how we think about development, relationship, and psychology. The storytelling is wonderful and engaging as we are taken back to those revolutionary days in the Boston area when these women took on the power structures of their universities and the psychology profession. We hear how these women stood strong and supported each other. Along the way, we gain greater insight into women's voice and growth-in-relationship and thus learn more about these essential theories. This book was engaging and inspiring!

Great book with important insights

This book addresses the history and the importance of the relational revolution. After reading a lot about gender differences, why boys struggle, why girls struggle, and looking at it all in context of how our culture and world are changing, this book is a must-read to put it into perspective.

Boston Globe rules OK

Christina Robb has achieved an easily assimilable description of the relational approach taken by the many women practitioners of academic psychology and psychtherapy who refused to accept the standard male-led, soulless,rigid technologies and thinking of the late 1970s and early 80s. That changes were needed to paychology's paradigms was first proposed by Carol Gilligan a student of the renowned moral rsearcher Lawrence Kohlberg. She and subsequent small informal groups of women extended the world's knowledge and understanding of difference and undercut the assumption that women's moral reasoning was inferior to that of men. It wasn't , it was different - not worse, just different. Thanks Christina Robb for explaining the history and development of revolutionary psychological thinking. Which raises the question. What action resulted?

This changes everything review

This item was received in excellent condition within a week of order.

Exceptionally Good!

The philosopher Ken Wilber first alerted to the work of Carol Gilligan. I was already aware of some of the work of Jean Baker Miller and Judith Lewis Herman and the revolution in psychology that they had spawned. But some of the details I did not known and they are captured in the remarkable narrative of Christina Robb's book. Almost thirty years ago, Carol Gilligan wrote an essay entitled "In a Different Voice," that was subsequently expanded into a book that I recommend highly. She described the marked discrepancies in morality and self-expression between men and women. For women, the whole notion of self tends to be inextricably bound up in a web of close relationships. Women tend to be more diligent about maintaining and nurturing these relationships, and inter-personal details tend to be more important to them, than they are for most men. At the time that she started writing about this, much psychological thinking in the United States had not yet dragged itself out of the confines of the post-Freudian theorizing that had dominated American psychology for decades. Gilligan and her co-workers identified relationships as the foundation of our psychological and physical states. At the time, the idea that men and women might tend to think and relate in different ways was anathema. I did a brief stint in Boston around that time, and it was pretty clear what could and could not be thought about. Despite the incredible liberal and intellectual traditions at Harvard, there were clearly some "no go" areas in psychology; gender differences being just one of them. Gilligan's work was courageous, and taken together with the findings of psychiatrists Judith Lewis Herman and Jean Baker Miller, would ultimately lead to radical alterations in the way that we understand the psychology of women. Are these gender differences social, political or biological? The answer is, I think, yes: all of the above. Christine Robb has managed to capture the quiet revolution that these scientists introduced, and which is still being felt today. Though it is surprising how often discussion of gender differences are still omitted from much work on self-psychology. In an otherwise wonderful book - The Self in Neuroscience and Psychiatry, edited by Tilo Kircher and Anthony David - there is scarcely any mention of gender. I would not normally expect to get through a 450-page book at one sitting: I'm not a speed-reader! But this is so well written and the biographies and interviews so enthralling, that I did indeed polish it off at one sitting. Though I feel sure that I shall return to it in the future. Though this is a big juicy book with pages of references and a bibliography, I'm going to make a prediction that it is going to be one of those rare cross-over books that will be read not just by academics and psychology students, but also by people who really are interested in knowing more about themselves and understanding relationships. It wouldn't surprise me at all if this
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