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More Examples, Less Theory
Historical Studies of Writing Psychology
By examining key psychologists from the past, this book shows why examples are so important and theory is over-valued.
Michael Billig (Author)
9781108736022, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 3 October 2019
292 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm, 0.43 kg
'Starting with the examples of nine very different writers, he selects an exemplary work from each of them and discusses the use (or sometimes neglect) of examples within that work. Furthermore, since most of the chapters are based on material presented in Billig's previously published works, they provide examples of one thoughtful scholar's concerns and interests over a long and productive career.' Raymond E. Fancher, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
In his new book, Michael Billig uses psychology's past to argue that nowadays, when we write about the mind, we should use more examples and less theory. He provides a series of historical studies, analysing how key psychological writers used examples. Billig offers new insights about famous analysts of the mind, such as Locke, James, Freud, Tajfel and Lewin. He also champions unfairly forgotten figures, like the Earl of Shaftesbury and the eccentric Abraham Tucker. There is a cautionary chapter on Lacan, warning what can happen when examples are ignored. Marie Jahoda is praised as the ultimate example: a psychologist from the twentieth century with a social and rhetorical imagination fit for the twenty-first. More Examples, Less Theory is an easy-to-read book that will inform and entertain academics and their students. It will particularly appeal to those who enjoy the details of examples rather than the simplifications of big theory.
1. Introduction
2. Locke and Shaftesbury: foster father and foster son
3. Tucker and James: in the same stream of thought
4. Freud: writing to reveal and conceal himself
5. Lacan: an ego in pursuit of the ego
6. Lewin: is there nothing as practical as a good example?
7. Tajfel and Bernstein: the limits of theory
8. Jahoda: the ultimate example
9. Concluding remarks.
Subject Areas: Popular psychology [VSP], Cognition & cognitive psychology [JMR], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH]