Authors
Marisela Montenegro
Publication date
2002/8
Journal
American Journal of Community Psychology
Volume
30
Pages
511-527
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers-Plenum Publishers
Description
This paper addresses the importance of the concept of ideology in community work. The implications of a Marxist approach to ideology in community practice are analyzed in terms of the concepts of problematization (P. Freire, 1979) and consciousness-raising (J. Barreiro, 1976), illustrating the point with some examples. The traditional Marxist perspective is also examined in relation to the perspectives of social constructionism (I. Ibáñez, 1996), cultural studies (A. McRobbie, 1992), post-Marxism (E. Laclau & C. Mouffe, 1985), and feminism (D. Haraway, 1991). It is argued that the concepts of hegemony and habitus (P. Bourdieu, 1985) can be useful to community social psychology theory and practice. A “situated perspective”—in which it is possible to dialogue from different “subject positions,” and articulate transformation and political action—is argued. The implications of this shifting in the concept of …
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