ABSTRACT

What transformation would happen if we could combine the best of liberal politics with psychology?

Awakening our Faith in the Future investigates the avenues for creating a new branch of psychology, a transformative political psychology. In the past, political psychology has focused directly on analysis and knowledge acquisition, rather than on interventions that transform self and culture. A transformative political psychology combines the best of traditional social science with the transformative intent of clinical psychology in order to create a new political culture.

Peter T. Dunlap suggests that while liberals focus intently outside of themselves on changing the world, those with psychological interests focus much more internally on changing themselves. In this book, he argues that by combining political liberalism and psychology, and encouraging psychologists to develop cultural learning practices based on ideas of self-knowledge, there is opportunity to transform our political culture.

Divided into five parts, this book explores:

  • stories of political destiny
  • questions of development
  • opportunities for political development
  • a speculative theory of cultural evolution
  • practices of a political psychologist.

This scholarly text uses personal experiences and the stories of progressive political leaders as pathways for addressing political problems, making it ideal reading for professionals and students in the fields of both politics and psychology as well as for activists interested in the future of liberalism.

part I|61 pages

Stories of political destiny

part II|49 pages

Questions of development

chapter 4|19 pages

From political to psychological liberalism

Freedom in psychological development

chapter 6|13 pages

From image to institution

part III|33 pages

Opportunities for political development

chapter 7|15 pages

Political development and emotion

chapter 8|16 pages

The rhythms of political development

part IV|88 pages

A speculative theory of cultural evolution

chapter 9|26 pages

A new story of liberalism

chapter 10|25 pages

The advent of psychological liberalism

chapter 11|35 pages

Emergence of the psychological citizen

part V|61 pages

Practices of a political psychologist

chapter 13|19 pages

Attending to the prejudices of liberalism

chapter 14|14 pages

A public psychological liberalism