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Bartlett, Culture and Cognition,9780415201728
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Bartlett, Culture and Cognition


Edition: 1st
Author(s): Saito, Akiko
ISBN10:  0415201721
ISBN13:  9780415201728
Format:  Hardcover
Pub. Date:  11/1/1999
Publisher(s): Routledge

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SummaryTable of Contents
Frederic C. Bartlett is well known for his contributions to cognitive psychology, especially in the field of memory. This collection, by internationally renowned scholars including: Alan Baddeley, Richard Gregory. William Brewer, Steen Larsen, Michael Cole, Jennifer Cole and Mary Douglas, brings together contemporary applications of Bartlett's work in cognitive psychology. It also includes areas in which Bartlett has been hitherto largely ignored: sociocultural psychology and the history and philosophy of science. It will be of great interest to those engaged in cognitive science, psychology, anthropology and the history of science.
List of contributors
ix
List of figures and tables
xi
Foreword xii
Jerome Bruner
Acknowledgements xvii
PART I Introduction 1(18)
Psychology as biological and social science
3(11)
Akiko Saito
Prospects
12(2)
The life and work of Frederic C. Bartlett
14(5)
Alan Welford
Note
18(1)
PART II Historical and theoretical issues 19(48)
W.H.R. Rivers and the early history of psychology at Cambridge
21(15)
Paul Whittle
Introduction
21(1)
Rivers remembered by his contemporaries
22(2)
Chronology
24(8)
Discussion
32(3)
Acknowledgements
35(1)
Notes
35(1)
Remembering Bartlett
36(10)
Alan Baddeley
Richard Gregory
Bartlett and applied psychology
36(3)
Bartlett and experimental psychology
39(6)
Note
45(1)
Bartlett's psycho-anthropological project
46(21)
Alberto Rosa
Introduction
46(1)
The `symbolic market' of ideas and Bartlett's heritage
46(2)
The anthropological background of the Cambridge Psychological Laboratory
48(3)
The social and the individual in Bartlett's early work
51(4)
Feeling, emotion and cognition as the subjective side of action
55(4)
Conventialisation and meaning: A study on symbolism
59(4)
From Bartlett to our times: Elaborations
63(2)
Conclusion: A new look at functionalism
65(2)
PART III Contemporary research 67(150)
Bartlett's concept of the schema and its impact on theories of knowledge representation in contemporary cognitive psychology
69(21)
William F. Brewer
Introduction
69(1)
Bartlett's empirical studies of human memory
70(5)
The schema theory
75(6)
Bartlett's data and Bartlett's theory
81(1)
The reception of Bartlett's schema theory
82(1)
Modern schema theory
83(2)
Problems with schema theory and new directions
85(4)
Conclusions
89(1)
Bartlett's trilogy of memory: Reconstructing the concept of attitude
90(25)
Steen F. Larsen
Dorthe Berntsen
Introduction
90(1)
Images: The Leipzig heritage
91(2)
Attitudes: The Wurzburg heritage
93(7)
Propositional attitudes and remembering
100(2)
Attitudes in autobiographical memory
102(10)
Conclusions
112(1)
Acknowledgements
113(1)
Notes
113(2)
Repeated reproduction from memory
115(20)
Henry L. Roediger III
Erik T. Bergman
Michelle L. Meade
Bartlett's studies of repeated reproduction
116(2)
Repeated testing: Reminiscence and hypermnesia
118(4)
Have Bartlett's repeated reproduction experiments been replicated?
122(3)
Replicating Bartlett's repeated reproduction experiments
125(3)
Social influences on memory
128(5)
Conclusions
133(2)
Re-fusing anthropology and psychology
135(20)
Jennifer Cole
Michael Cole
Early writing
135(3)
Remembering and Thinking
138(3)
Applying the concepts
141(5)
Conventionalisation and remembering the colonial past in East Madagascar
146(7)
Concluding remarks
153(1)
Notes
154(1)
Multilevel analyses of social bases of cognition
155(24)
Akiko Saito
Bartlett's work on social bases of cognition
155(1)
Bartlett's multilevel analyses
156(7)
Sociogenesis of cognition: Conventionalisation
163(7)
In relation to social representation theory
170(5)
Conclusion
175(2)
Notes
177(2)
Memory and selective attention: Bartlett and Evans-Pritchard
179(15)
Mary Douglas
Selective attention
179(4)
Reciprocal innervation and distance perceptors
183(2)
Remembering degrees of kinship
185(3)
Remembering the dead
188(1)
Distance perceptors and structural opposition
188(5)
Note
193(1)
Whatever happened to `social constructiveness'?
194(23)
David Bloor
Social constructiveness
194(2)
Bartlett on science and technology
196(2)
Sound-locators
198(2)
National styles
200(7)
Bartlett and the sociology of science
207(2)
Conclusion
209(1)
Acknowledgements
209(1)
Notes
210(7)
Bibliography: The papers of Frederic Charles Bartlett 217(34)
Hugh Frederic Bartlett
References 251(22)
Author index 273(6)
Subject index 279

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