- PAST PROGRAMS - 1992
1992 CHEIRON PROGRAM
University of Windsor
Ontario, Canada
THURSDAY JUNE 18, 1992
3:00 - 7:00: Registration
7:30 - Cocktail Reception
FRIDAY JUNE 19, 1992
BREAKFAST 7:45 - 9:00
8:30 - 12:00: Registration
Registration - Vanier Lobby Cocktail Reception - McPherson Alumni Lounge
PAPER SESSION I - Chair: RAND EVANS 9:00-9:30
WOLFGANG G. BRINGMANN, A. NICHOLAS DEPACE & WILLIAM D. G. BALANCEA Brief Handwritten Autobiography by Fechner 9:30-10:00
ADRIAN BROCK
What's in a Name? Volkerpsychologie and Social Psychology
COFFEE BREAK 10:0-10:30
INVITED ADDRESS - Chair and Introduction BARBARA C. ROSS 10:30 - 12:00
DOROTHY ROSS
An Historian's View of American Social Science
Discussant: FRANK ANNUNZIATA
LUNCH 12:00-1:00
PAPER SESSION II - Chair: MARY J. WRIGHT 1:00 -1:30
MARGERY B. FRANKLIN, DORIS B. WALLACE & ROBERT T. KEEGAN
The Observing Eye: Baby Diaries and the "Scientific" Study of the Child 1:30-2:00
KATHY MILAR
Helen Thompson Woolley and the Cincinnati Vocation Bureau
2:00 - 2:30
FRANZ SAMELSON
On Resurrecting the Reputation of Sir Cyril (Burt)
COFFEE BREAK 2:30 -3:00
SYMPOSIUM - Psychology and Colonialism 3:00 - 5:00
Chair and Organiser: ADRIAN BROCK
Participants:
PAUL PROBST
Psychology and Colonialism in the Second German Empire
FLOYD W. RUDMIN
William McDougall in Colonial Borneo: An Early Applied Social Psychology of Peace
MIHO HOTTA
Psychology and Colonialism in Japan
JOHANN LOUW
Psychology and Colonialism in South Africa Before World War II
FATHALI N. MOGHADDAN
Is Everything Due to Colonialism? Psychological Barriers to the Development of Indigenous Third World Psychology, Lessons from the History of Psychology in India, China and Iran
DINNER CRUISE 5:30 Bus departs
SATURDAY JUNE 20, 1992
BREAKFAST 7:45 -9:00
PAPER SESSION III - Chair: HORACE MARCHANT 9:00 -9:30
ALFRED H. FUCHS
The Origin and Evolution of the First American Textbook in Psychology 9:30 -10:00
WADE E. PICKREN
A Lamp Unto Our Feet, A Light Unto Our Way: New Psychology
and Religion in Popular Periodicals,1884?]1905
COFFEE BREAK 10:00 -10:30
PAPER SESSION IV - Chair: WILLIAM WOODWARD
10:30 - 11:00
JOHN A. MILLS
Behaviorism in American Sociology, Economics & Political Science, 1897 to 1920
11:00-11:30
NADINE WEIDMAN
Lashley, Watson and the Meaning of Behaviorism
11:30 - 12:00
DONALD A. DEWSBURY
The Boys of Summer at The End of Summer: The Watson?]Lashley Correspondence of the 1950s
LUNCH 12:00 -1:00
POSTER SESSION (Oak Room) 1:00 -2:30
COFFEE BREAK 2:30 -3:00
SYMPOSIUM -Feminist Theory and the Historiography of the Social and Behavioral Sciences 3:00-5:00
Chair and Organiser - KATALIN DZINAS
Participants:
FRANCES CHERRY
Gordon Allport's "Letters From Jenny:" What We Can Learn from a Feminist Historical Reading
BETTY M. BAYER
Histories of Inclusion: The Importance of Gender to Small Group Research,1940?]1990
ELLEN HERMAN
Beyond Inclusion: Pushing the Limits of Feminist Historiography
LAUREL FURUMOTO
What Does It Mean to Do Feminist History of Psychology?
CHEIRON GENERAL MEETING 5:00-6:00
OPEN BAR 6:30 - 7:30 BANQUET 7:30 ALL-CHEIRON TRIVIA BOWL 9:30 ?]
SUNDAY JUNE 21, 1992
BREAKFAST 7:45 -9:00
PAPER SESSION V - Chair: LEILA ZENDERLAND
9:00 -9:30
DAVID J. STALEY
Sociologies of Knowledge: The Rockefeller Foundation and the Resurrection of German Sociology
9:30-10:00
IAN NICHOLSON
Psychology and Social Reform, 1936?]1945: The Case of Goodwin B. Watson
COFFEE BREAK 10:00 - 10:30
SYMPOSIUM From Rhetoric to Investigative Practice: The Rise of Experimentation and Graduate Training in Social Psychology at Michigan After World War II 10:30-12:30
Chair and Organiser: IAN LUBEK Participants:
ANDREW S. WINSTON
The Rhetoric of Early Experimental Social Psychology: Something Borrowed or Something New?
HENDERIKUS STAN & IAN LUBEK
A Textual Analysis of the Development of Experimentation in Social Psychology
IAN LUBEK & HEATHER THOMS
Social Psychology at the University of Michigan and the Rise of Laboratory Experimental Methodology After World War II
Discussants:
DANIEL KATZ
Social Psychology at Michigan: A View from a Faculty Perspective
ALBERT PEPITONE
Social Psychology at Michigan: A View from a Graduate Student Turned Instructor
FRANZ SAMELSON
Social Psychology at Michigan: A view from a Graduate Student Turned Critical Historian
LUNCH 12:30-1:30
PRESENTERS IN POSTER SESSION Saturday, June 20th 1:00 ?] 2:30
CHARLES F. BLAICH
Historical Reasons for the Reluctance of Psychologists to Accept Theory of Natural Selection
JERZY BOBRYK
L. Wittgenstein and the Rise of Postmodern Philosophy
YAAKOV GARB
A Theorized Life: The Reflexive Origins of Robert Merton's Later Sociological Work
MISRA GIRISHWAR
On the Roots of Psychological Thought in Indian Tradition
ELIZABETH E. HUNT
Working Mothers and Mother's Work
LESZEK KOCZANOWICZ
C. H. Mead and L. S. Vygotski on Meaning and the Self
JENNIFER E. MACDONALD
Social Psychology in American Introductory Psychology Textbooks: 1880 to 1960
RICHARD B. MORRIS
Mary Calkins and Self?]Psychology: An Asset to Introductory Psychology
STEWART PACE
Experimenter Bias-Reflections on the Half-Life of a Phenomenon
JAMES C. PAHARIK
Sociology, Value-Free, Activist, or Something In-Between?
HANS POLS
Psychology and Social Institutions
ALVIN H. SMITH
Audrey Mary Shuey (1900?]1978)-Psychologist on the Fringe
AKAYSHA TANG
The Lost Voice from the Ching Dynasty
POLYMNIA ZACEFKA
The Concept of Work in French Post-War Sociology: 194-1965
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