Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Psychologists' War
- Interlude I
- 1 Growing Pains: After the Great War
- 2 Mobilizing for World War II: From National Defense to Professional Unity
- 3 Home Fires: Female Psychologists and the Politics of Gender
- Interlude II
- 4 Sorting Soldiers: Psychology as Personnel Management
- 5 Applied Human Relations: The Utility of Social Psychology
- 6 From the Margins: Making the Clinical Connection
- 7 Engineering Behavior: Applied Experimental Psychology
- Interlude III
- 8 A New Order: Postwar Support for Psychology
- 9 Remodeling the Academic Home
- Interlude IV
- 10 The Mirror of Practice: Toward a Reflexive Science
- 11 Beyond the Laboratory: Giving Psychology Away
- Interlude V
- Epilogue: Science in Search of Self
- Index
Interlude V
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: The Psychologists' War
- Interlude I
- 1 Growing Pains: After the Great War
- 2 Mobilizing for World War II: From National Defense to Professional Unity
- 3 Home Fires: Female Psychologists and the Politics of Gender
- Interlude II
- 4 Sorting Soldiers: Psychology as Personnel Management
- 5 Applied Human Relations: The Utility of Social Psychology
- 6 From the Margins: Making the Clinical Connection
- 7 Engineering Behavior: Applied Experimental Psychology
- Interlude III
- 8 A New Order: Postwar Support for Psychology
- 9 Remodeling the Academic Home
- Interlude IV
- 10 The Mirror of Practice: Toward a Reflexive Science
- 11 Beyond the Laboratory: Giving Psychology Away
- Interlude V
- Epilogue: Science in Search of Self
- Index
Summary
As psychology boomed in America during the 1950s Edwin Boring was flourishing. He continued working his usual schedule after reaching normal retirement age at the beginning of the decade and finally achieved some measure of personal satisfaction in his professional accomplishments. He had found an important role for himself as psychology's great communicator.
Within the profession, Boring continued to add his voice to discussions about psychology's past, present, and future. He was called upon to provide counsel and advice to the American Psychological Association on important matters of policy and procedure. For instance, in 1954, at the height of the hysteria over Communist subversion whipped up by Senator Joseph McCarthy, Boring was appointed chair of the APA Committee on Freedom of Enquiry, which was charged with the task of exploring ways to protect academic freedom.
In 1955 the American Psychological Association launched a new journal devoted to book reviews. It was christened Contemporary Psychology and Boring served as editor. He sought a cosmopolitan style modeled after the New Yorker or the Saturday Review. Known as CP (in a sly play on the well-known abbreviation for the Communist Party), the new bimonthly journal provided a platform for its editor to pronounce on all things psychological in a column entitled “CP Speaks.”
The journal was an immediate success. In addition to providing timely and indepth reviews of the burgeoning literature of psychology, it fostered discussion of professional as well as technical issues.
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- Information
- Psychologists on the MarchScience, Practice, and Professional Identity in America, 1929–1969, pp. 259 - 262Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999