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Summary
Summary
How do the social categories with which we identify, or to which others assign us, affect our psychological makeup, our social behaviors, and our life outcomes? The contributors to this edited volume answer this broad social psychological inquiry through their research on the social categories of gender and immigration, the "intersectionality" of these two social categories, and how people outside the two categories frame their conceptions of the two groups and of themselves.
Social Categories in Everyday Experience explores and expands on the construct of social categories by analyzing timely questions such as: How do members of marginalized groups cope with identity and discrimination in everyday settings like school and the workplace? How can stereotyping and discrimination be reduced among members of society's many cross-cutting categories?
The editors and contributors to this volume, who span the disciplines of American and European psychology, sociology, public policy, social psychology, and personality psychology, draw from the work of pioneering social psychologist Kay Deaux, who has served as their academic mentor or scholarly inspiration through her prestigious and prolific body of work.
Author Notes
Shaun Wiley, PhD , is an assistant professor of psychology at The College of New Jersey. His research focuses on collective identity and intergroup relations among marginalized and immigrant groups. Specifically, it examines how members of disadvantaged groups deal with discrimination and low status and the factors that influence the relationship between people's multiple social identities.
Gina Philogène, PhD , is an associate professor of psychology at Sarah Lawrence College, where she has been on the faculty since 1998. Her PhD is from the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris. Her interests are in social and cultural psychology, history of psychology, race and social identity, as well as social representations.
She is the author or editor of three books: From Black to African American: A New Representation (Greenwood-Praeger, 1999), The Representations of the Social: Bridging Theoretical Traditions (with Kay Deaux; Blackwell, 2001), and Racial Identity in Context: The Legacy of Kenneth B. Clark (APA, 2004). She is the recipient of several grants from the National Science Foundation as well as APA. She is currently working on a book analyzing the role of group denominations in civil societies.
Tracey A. Revenson, PhD , is professor of psychology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her research centers on stress and coping processes among individuals, couples, and families facing chronic physical illnesses; the influence of interpersonal relationships on adaptation; and the influence of gender on health.
She was the founding editor-in-chief of the journal Women's Health: Research on Gender, Behavior, and Policy , serves as associate editor of the Annals of Behavioral Medicine , and is on the editorial board of Health Psychology .
Dr. Revenson served as president of APA's Division of Health Psychology in 2005. She is the author or editor of six volumes, including Couples Coping With Stress, The Handbook of Health Psychology , and Ecological Research to Promote Social Change .
Table of Contents
Contributors | p. xi |
Foreword | p. xiii |
Preface | p. xv |
Introduction: Social Categories Matter | p. 3 |
Part I Theoretical Foundations | p. 9 |
1 Self, Social Identity, and Stigma: Through Kay Deaux's Lens | p. 11 |
2 Understanding Social Categories: An Epistemological Journey | p. 31 |
3 Extraordinary Takes on "Ordinary Life": Categories of Sex, Gender, and Identity in the Work of Kay Deaux | p. 45 |
Part II Gender | p. 61 |
4 Women as Leaders: Progress Through the Labyrinth | p. 63 |
5 Linking Personal and Social Histories With Collective Identity Narratives | p. 83 |
6 Standing at the Crossroads of Identity: An Intersectional Approach to Women's Social Identities and Political Consciousness | p. 103 |
Part III Immigration | p. 131 |
7 The Dehumanization of Refugees: Determinants and Consequences | p. 133 |
8 Xenophobia and How to Fight It: Immigrants as the Quintessential "Other" | p. 151 |
9 The Dynamics of Multicultural Identities | p. 165 |
Part IV Looking Back and Moving Forward | p. 187 |
10 Building Solidarity Across Difference: Social Identity, Intersectionality, and Collective Action for Social Change | p. 189 |
11 Categories We Live By | p. 205 |
Index | p. 219 |
About the Editors | p. 227 |