TY - BOOK ID - 2423407 TI - The Self-society dynamic : cognition, emotion, and action AU - Howard, Judith A. AU - Callero, Peter L. PY - 1991 SN - 0521384338 0521030153 0511527721 PB - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, DB - UniCat KW - Cognition. KW - Psychology, Social. KW - Self Concept. KW - Social Perception. KW - Social interaction KW - -Social perception KW - -Social psychology KW - -Mass psychology KW - Psychology, Social KW - Human ecology KW - Psychology KW - Social groups KW - Sociology KW - Cognition, Social KW - Interpersonal perception KW - Social cognition KW - Interpersonal relations KW - Perception KW - Social cognitive theory KW - Human interaction KW - Interaction, Social KW - Symbolic interaction KW - Exchange theory (Sociology) KW - Social psychology KW - Perception, Social KW - Perceptions, Social KW - Social Perceptions KW - Self-Perception KW - Self Esteem KW - Self Perception KW - Concept, Self KW - Concepts, Self KW - Esteem, Self KW - Esteems, Self KW - Perception, Self KW - Perceptions, Self KW - Self Concepts KW - Self Esteems KW - Self Perceptions KW - Self-Perceptions KW - Personal Autonomy KW - Social Psychology KW - Psychologies, Social KW - Social Psychologies KW - Cognitive Function KW - Cognitions KW - Cognitive Functions KW - Function, Cognitive KW - Functions, Cognitive KW - Congresses KW - Social perception KW - Congresses. KW - -Congresses KW - Cognition KW - Self Concept KW - Social Perception KW - Psychology, Perceptual KW - Perceptual Psychology KW - Self Confidence KW - Confidence, Self KW - Health Sciences KW - Psychiatry & Psychology UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:2423407 AB - Sociologists generally study macrolevel institutions and social processes with little reference to the individual. Psychologists, on the other hand, tend to study individual-level processes with little reference to society. This volume, featuring contributions from influential scholars in US social psychology, brings the link between the individual and society into focus. The chapters in the volume are distinguished by their concentration on either cognitive, affective or behavioural processes. These analyses eschew the traditional psychological approach to individual-level processes and instead offer intriguing accounts of how thought, emotion and action are embedded in social context and are central to the dynamic between self and society. Together, the 14 chapters present a synthesis of theory and research that are a major force in stimulating and influencing investigations of the link between the individual and the larger society. ER -