Advances in experimental social psychology Volume 21, Social psychological studies of the self: perspectives and programs / edited by Leonard Berkowitz.

ADV EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY,V 21.

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via ScienceDirect)
Other Authors: Berkowitz, Leonard, 1926-
Other title:Social psychological studies of the self: perspectives and programs.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: San Diego : Academic Press, 1988.
Series:Advances in experimental social psychology ; v. 21.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Front Cover; Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, Volume 21; Copyright Page; Contents; Contributors; Chapter 1. Introduction; I. Background; II. Part One: The Self as Known; III. Part Two: Self-Motives; IV. Conclusion; References; Part I . The Self as Known; Chapter 2. Narrative and the Self as Relationship; I. Introduction; II. Self-Narratives; III. Narrative Form in Two Populations: An Application; IV. Elaborating the Thesis of Self-Narrative; V. Lived Narratives as Relational Scenarios; VI. Conclusion; References.
  • Chapter 3.Self and Others: Studies in Social Personality and AutobiographyI. Historical Antecedents of the "Social Self"; II. Content and Organization of Social Personality; III. Laboratory Studies of Self and Others; IV. Autobiography; V. Summary and Conclusions; References; Chapter 4. Content and Process in the Experience of Self; I. Introduction; II. Aims and Approaches of the Present Research Program; III. Distinctiveness of Characteristics and Their Salience in the Phenomenal Self; IV. Other Studies of the Content of the Phenomenal Self; V. Processes of Self-Thought: The Verb Data.
  • VI. General ImplicationsReferences; Chapter 5. Information Processing and the Study of the Self; I. Introduction; II. Forms of Mental Representation; III. The Self in the Architecture of Cognition; IV. The Self-Reference Effect; V. Self-Referent and Other-Referent Processing; VI. Retrieving Autobiographical Memories; VII. Autobiographical Memory and Judgment about the Self; VIII. Representations of Oneself in the Future; IX. The Self in Personal Decision-Making and Self-Regulation; X. Conscious and Nonconscious Aspects of Selfhood; References; Part II . Self-Motives.
  • Chapter 6. Toward a Self-Evaluation Maintenance Model of Social BehaviorI. Introduction; II. The Self-Evaluation Maintenance Model; III. Some Research Examples; IV. Things to Notice about the Model/Research; V. Strong Predictions and the Liberating Quality of Interactions; VI. The Model in Perspective; VII. SEM and Emotion: The Epistemological Status of Self-Evaluation; VIII. The Causal Role of Affect in SEM Processes; IX. The Embeddedness of SEM Processes; X. Conclusion; References; Chapter 7. The Self: A Dialectical Approach; I. Introduction; II. Interpersonal Congruency Theory, circa 1965.
  • III. Congruency Theory and Personality ChangeIV. Congruency by Implication: A Reformulation; V. Congruency Processes: A Dialectical View; VI. Stability and Change: A Revised Explanation; References; Chapter 8. The Psychology of Self-Affirmation: Sustaining the Integrity of the Self; I. Introduction; II. Dissonance as Self-Affirmation; III. The Role of Psychological Inconsistency in Mental Life; IV. A Psychology of Experimental Embarrassments: A Paradigm Problem; V. Attribution as Self-Affirmation; VI. Toward a Model of Self-Affirmation Processes; VII. Implications; References.