Course Info: CSI-0272

CourseCSI-0272 Critical Psychology
Long TitleCritical Psychology
Term2015F
Note(s) Prerequisites Required
Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson Hall 108 on W from 2:30-5:20
FacultyPeter Gilford
Capacity20
Available2
Waitlist0
Distribution(s)
Cumulative Skill(s)Independent Work
Multiple Cultural Perspectives
Writing and Research
Additional InfoPrerequisite: Prior college-level course in psychology Students are expected to spend at least six to eight hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time.
Description

Students often approach the field of psychology with a desire to both understand themselves and to help alleviate the suffering of others. Many are also motivated by a desire to work towards social justice. Yet psychology and the mental health disciplines, along with their myriad forms of inquiry and intervention, are inextricably entangled with current social and political arrangements. This course will survey the vast field of psychology from a critical perspective, problematizing and inquiring about psychological methods, practices, and philosophical assumptions with the intent of coming to understand how psychology has come to be such a potent and undetectable sociopolitical force. By inquiring about how psychological knowledge shapes and defines how we come to self-understanding and what we believe it means to be properly human, we will explore how these understandings support or challenge existing arrangements of power and privilege. A prior college-level course in psychology is a prerequisite for enrollment. Students should be committed to submitting weekly commentary on assigned readings, completing a class presentation,  a mid-term paper, and to initiate and complete a final paper project of their own design by the end of the course.