Psychology

What if Discipline Is Not Interdisciplinary? The Case of Social Psychology in India

What if Discipline Is Not Interdisciplinary? The Case of Social Psychology in India

The article highlights the missing picture of interdisciplinarity in Indian social psychology from a critical cultural perspective.

Author

Chetan Sinha, Associate Professor, Jindal Global Law School, O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, Haryana, India.

Summary

The present work highlights the missing picture of interdisciplinarity in Indian social psychology from a critical cultural perspective. In India, social psychologists’ tried to inculcate the missing picture of ‘indigenous perspective’ from the cultural vantage point.

The idea of this article is to explain the problem with claimed indigenous status without critically handling the reified social categories such as social class, religion, gender, and caste. However, this was handled to some extent in other disciplines but a deeper connection was not observed to be with the social psychology in India.

There were divides and differences in the explanation of the same issues and the theoretical and methodological stance of these different disciplines created a further gap in coming up with the meaningful construction.

Published in: Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science

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