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Constructiveness in the history of psychology

Frederic Bartlett from past to future

Brady Wagoner

pp. 151-166

This chapter explores the issue of constructiveness in the history of psychology through the work of Frederic Bartlett and his legacy. First, key themes of Bartlett's constructionist approach are outlined, showing how they apply to both individual and group processes. Second, the chapter looks at how Bartlett's ideas have been reconstructed by others using Bartlett's analytic framework for studying cultural transmission and transformation. An argument is made for the need to see constructiveness as more than a reconfiguration of elements already given, but instead as a creative response to new circumstances. In this way, a true constructive approach aims to overcome the one-sided focus on human reactivity by including people's history, material and social environment, wider experiences, aspirations for the future, and, most of all, the constructive ways in which humans live and are forward oriented.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-42760-7_8

Full citation:

Wagoner, B. (2016)., Constructiveness in the history of psychology: Frederic Bartlett from past to future, in S. Hroar klempe & R. Smith (eds.), Centrality of history for theory construction in psychology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 151-166.

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