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Decolonizing Psychology Sunil Bhatia (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, Connecticut College)

Decolonizing Psychology By Sunil Bhatia (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, Connecticut College)

Summary

In Decolonizing Psychology: Globalization, Social Justice, and Indian Youth Identities, Sunil Bhatia explores how the cultural dynamics of neo-liberal globalization shape urban Indian youth identities and, in particular, he articulates how Euro-American psychological science continues to prevent narratives of self and identity in non-Western nations from entering the broader conversation.

Decolonizing Psychology Summary

Decolonizing Psychology: Globalization, Social Justice, and Indian Youth Identities by Sunil Bhatia (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, Connecticut College)

In recent years, the news media has directed a significant amount of attention to the effect of globalization on the second most populous nation in the world: India. With the emergence of new economic opportunities and the influx of foreign popular culture and commodities, India has experienced an enormous sea of change in the last few decades. In Decolonizing Psychology: Globalization, Social Justice, and Indian Youth Identities, author Sunil Bhatia focuses on the psychological tensions that these changes have brought upon Indian youth today. Drawing on dozens of interviews, Bhatia offers readers a compelling glimpse and analysis of how these youth populations are engaging with the emerging presence of globalization in their day-to-day lives. As Bhatia explains, young Indians use the term 'world class selves' as a way to identify and describe the ways in which globalization has strengthened their standing in the world. By frequenting urban cafes and bars, watching American television and cinema, traveling abroad, and regularly consuming foreign commodities, Indian youth absorb the westernized culture and view themselves as peers to their western counterparts. At the same time, however, these young Indians proudly hold onto their homeland's traditions governing family and religious values. With remarkable clarity and nuance, Bhatia sheds an important light on the universalizing power and the colonizing dimensions of Euro-American psychology. By integrating insights from postcolonial, narrative, and cultural psychologies to explore how Euro-American scientific psychology became the standard approach, Bhatia reminds readers of whose stories are not being told, what knowledge is not being considered, and whose lives are not included in the central understanding of psychology today.

About Sunil Bhatia (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, Connecticut College)

Sunil Bhatia is a professor of human development at Connecticut College. His research focuses on the development of self and identity within the postcolonial contexts of migration, globalization, neo-liberalization, and the formation of transnational diasporas. In 2014, he was elected a Fellow to the American Psychological Association for his outstanding local, national, and international contributions to the field of psychology. In December 2014, he was selected by the American Psychological Association for the prestigious APA 2015 Humanitarian of the Year award.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Decolonizing Psychology: Transnational Cultures, Social Justice, and Indian Youth Identities Chapter 1: Decolonizing Moves: Beyond Eurocentric Culture, Narrative, and Identity Chapter 2: The Cultural Psychology of Globalization: Constructing Desirable Identities and Spaces Chapter 3: Psychology and the Neoliberal Self: Global Culture and The New Colonial Subjects Chapter 4: Stories and Theories: Globalization, Narrative and Meaning-Making Chapter 5: Travelling Transnational Identities: Imagining Stories of Ultimate Indianness Chapter 6: Outsourcing the Self: Work, Love, and Money in the Call Center Culture Chapter 7: Identities Left Behind: Globalization, Social Inequality and the Search for Dignity Chapter 8: Towards a Transnational Cultural Psychology: Narrative and Social Justice in the Age of Unequal Globalization Chapter 9: Studying Globalization at Home: Reflections on Method, Self-Reflexivity and Narrative Inquiry

Additional information

NLS9780199964727
9780199964727
0199964726
Decolonizing Psychology: Globalization, Social Justice, and Indian Youth Identities by Sunil Bhatia (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, Connecticut College)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
20171026
360
Winner of Winner of the 2018 APA William James Award.
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