4.3 Article

General Psychology Otherwise: A Decolonial Articulation

Journal

REVIEW OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 339-353

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/10892680211048177

Keywords

coloniality; colonial mentality; colonial narcissism; decolonial; locus of enunciation

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Critics of general psychology project criticize it for emphasizing basic processes abstracted from context and a narrow foundation of research while overlooking the life in majority-world communities. Decolonial perspectives value the insights from these communities, aiding in understanding the coloniality in modern individualist lifeways and the fundamental relationality of human existence.
Critics have faulted the project of general psychology for conceptions of general truth that (1) emphasize basic processes abstracted from context and (2) rest on a narrow foundation of research among people in enclaves of Eurocentric modernity. Informed by these critiques, we propose decolonial perspectives as a new scholarly imaginary for general psychology Otherwise. Whereas hegemonic articulations of general psychology tend to ignore life in majority-world communities as something peripheral to its knowledge project, decolonial perspectives regard these communities as a privileged site for general understanding. Indeed, the epistemic standpoint of such communities is especially useful for understanding the coloniality inherent in modern individualist lifeways and the fundamental relationality of human existence. Similarly, whereas hegemonic articulations of general psychology tend to impose particular Eurocentric forms masquerading as general laws, the decolonial vision for general psychology Otherwise exchanges the universalized particular for a more pluralistic (or pluriversal) general.

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