Psychology in Africa (Psychology Revivals)

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A01=Mallory Wober
African developmental psychology
African Infants
African Personality
African Social Scientists
Auditory Pattern Recognition
Author_Mallory Wober
Baganda Women
blocks
Category=JMH
cognitive development studies
cross-cultural assessment
DQ Score
educational psychology Africa
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
field
Field Independence
frame
french
Gesell Tests
harsh
Harsh Weaning
Illusion Susceptibility
independence
Infant Precocity
Inference Style
Inter-group Attitudes
Inter-sex Differences
Ivory Coast
Job Prestige
koh's
Koh's Blocks
Koh’s Blocks
Life Styles
Low Ambiguity Tolerance
Maternal Behaviour
Mental Development
personality measurement Africa
psychological research in African societies
Raven's Matrices
Raven’s Matrices
rod
social change adaptation
test
Vice Versa
weaning
Young Men
Zambian Children

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138017863
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Dec 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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It is now well over a hundred and fifty years since the first celebrated geographical explorations of Africa took place. However, it was many years before there began quests of a different kind – the investigation of behaviour, personality, attitude and ability among Africa’s people. Originally published in 1975, this book is an account of that work: the first explorations in Africa of psychology.

In an exhaustive and well-documented report the author, a psychologist who had himself done research in Nigeria, Uganda and who had lectured at Makerere University, drew together the main threads of the research carried out so far, putting the issues in an African perspective but anchoring them firmly within the framework of modern psychological thinking and technique of the time.

Are there any common personality and intellectual characteristics among Africans? How does weaning affect African child development? How have Africans’ feelings developed about city life and industrial work? The questions the author considers range from the broad-based to the specific. The challenges which lay ahead for African investigators then moving into the mainstream of the work are also discussed.

But perhaps above all the book made a convincing case for psychology becoming a relevant and finely honed discipline in Black Africa, characterised by practical application to Black African society.

Each chapter covers a defined area of modern psychology of the time and presents a comprehensive survey in a language no more technical that the subject warrants. At the time is was felt this book would be invaluable to students of Africa secondary education whose course included a psychology component and to African students beginning a degree course in psychology. It would also have provided an informative supplement to courses in medicine, development studies, political science, sociology and anthropology.

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