Social Selves: Theories of the Social Formation of Personality Ian Burkitt
`Although scholars recognize the need for alternatives to the long dominant concept of the self contained individual, little progress has been made toward such development. Burkitt's lucid book provides an essential prolegomenon to such a project. Burkitt offers a discerning discussion...the volume is essential reading for anyone concerned with this challenging problem' - Choice
`Explores a wealth of literature on the social nature of individuality. Essentially, its message is that society and self are intertwined in important ways... an excellent book. It deals with complex material in a clear and readable manner, laying out the rationales behind many different theories with great clarity and precision. Although it challenges many assumptions of traditional social psychology, it is a masterpiece of scholarly analysis and a book that should be read by anyone interested in either personality or social behavior' - Contemporary Psychology
`This stimulating and thoughtful book provides an extremely good review of the literature on the social formation of personality, as well as representing a significant advance in such theorizing... a very valuable contribution to its field. By following Burkitt, sociological auto/biographers can now treat their subjects as fully social beings whose personalities are formed through the full range of social relations and interdependencies' - Sociology
Social Selves offers an interdisciplinary overview of theories of the social formation of personality - from symbolic interactionism and ethogenics, to poststructuralism, developmental psychology, Marxism and figurational sociology.
Drawing on insights from sociology, psychology, linguistics and philosophy, Burkitt argues that society and the self are essentially intertwined, with every element of the self being interconnected through social identity. He explains differences between individuals and divisions between different aspects of the personality as being generated by the way social relations and interdependencies both connect and separate us from others. The book's theme, therefore, is the dialectical relationship between social and cultural formations and the individual activity that occurs within these parameters, creating and recreating the social and personal worlds.