An illuminating and original collection of essays on 20th Century Russian psychology, offering unparalleled coverage of the scholarship of Vygotsky and his peers.
Anton Yasnitsky, Ph.D. (University of Toronto), is an independent researcher who specializes in the Vygotsky-Luria Circle. He is the author of Vygotsky: An Intellectual Biography (2018). He has also edited Questioning Vygotsky's Legacy: Scientific Psychology or Heroic Cult (2018) and Revisionist Revolution in Vygotsky Studies (2015).
INTRODUCTION
A new history of psychology: Soviet, Russian, Marxist (Anton Yasnitsky)
Part I. THEORY
1. Reminiscence about future Marxist psychology: one Hundred years of solitude (Leonid Radzikhovskii)
2. Sergei Rubinstein as the founder of Soviet Marxist psychology: "Problems of psychology in the works of Karl Marx" (1934) and beyond (Anton Yasnitsky)
Part II. PRACTICE
3. Soviet psychohygiene, outpatient psychiatry and international knowledge exchanges (Grégory Dufaud)
4. Pedology as occupation in the early Soviet Union (Andy Byford)
Part III. DIALOGUES
5. The golden age of Soviet psychology in the mirror of contemporary Marxian psychology in Brazil (Gisele Toassa, Flávia da Silva Ferreira Asbahr, and Marilene Proença Rebello de Souza)
6. Alexander Luria: Marxist psychologist and transnational scientific broker: a personal account (Alexandre Métraux)
EPILOGUE
Soviet Psychology and its utopias: historical reflections for current science (Luciano Nicolás García)