Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, Taiwan.
John Jay College and The Graduate Center, City University of New York, United States.
Curr Opin Psychol. 2020 Oct;35:132-137. doi: 10.1016/j.copsyc.2020.06.011. Epub 2020 Jun 27.
Building upon the poststructuralist turn in psychology, we reposition psychological knowledge of social movements via a discursive framework utilizing: 1) feminist frameworks of intersectionality and queer critiques of binarism that highlight the significance of multiple identities, and 2) affect theories that broaden the psycho-political scale to include politics beyond discursive framing and recognizable identities. We draw on contemporary scholarship describing discourse in social movements to propose a twofold model in which collective identity and affect capture the dynamics we see as fundamental for a psychology of social movements and societal change.
在心理学的后结构主义转向的基础上,我们通过一个话语框架重新定位了社会运动的心理学知识,该框架利用了:1)交叉性的女权主义框架和对二元论的酷儿批判,这些批判强调了多种身份的重要性,以及 2)情感理论,这些理论扩大了心理政治的范围,将话语框架和可识别的身份之外的政治也包括在内。我们借鉴了描述社会运动中的话语的当代学术著作,提出了一个双重模型,其中集体认同和情感捕捉了我们认为对于社会运动和社会变革心理学至关重要的动态。