
Contents
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Origins through World War I (1890–1919) Origins through World War I (1890–1919)
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Early Developments (1920–1935) Early Developments (1920–1935)
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War Influences (1936–1950) War Influences (1936–1950)
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Structural Differentiation and Slow Acceptance (1950–1965) Structural Differentiation and Slow Acceptance (1950–1965)
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Dual Crises (1965–1985) Dual Crises (1965–1985)
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Coming Back Together Again (1985–present) Coming Back Together Again (1985–present)
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Acknowledgment Acknowledgment
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References References
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2 The Intertwined Histories of Personality and Social Psychology
Get accessHarry T. Reis, Department of Psychology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA
Frances Cherry, Department of Psychology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Published:18 September 2012
Cite
Abstract
The histories of personality and social psychology have been closely intertwined for more than a century. But there have been several critical differences that have at times acted to separate the two fields. One such divergence involved their models of humans—whether largely irrational (the personality emphasis) or largely rational (the social emphasis). This difference has now subsided with their joint acceptance of a “bounded rationality.” More important has been their difference in focus—the microlevel of the person versus the mesolevel of the group and situation. But now both fields largely agree on interaction models that include both the person and the situation. We trace these tensions between the two fields across six diverse eras: (1) Origins through World War I (1890–1919); (2) Early Developments (1920–1935); (3) War Influences (1936–1950); (4) Structural Differentiation and Slow Acceptance (1951–1965); (5) Dual Crises (1966–1985); and (6) Coming Back Together Again (1986–present).
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