Crowds, Psychology, and Politics, 1871–1899

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2006-11-23
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
List Price: $64.99

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Summary

Jaap van Ginneken's study explores the social and intellectual history of the emergence of crowd psychology in the late nineteenth century. Both the popular work of the French physician LeBon and his predecessors are shown to be influenced and closely connected with both the dramatic events and academic debates of their day. Although LeBon is generally attributed as having created the field of crowd psychology, this study demonstrates how he derived most of his key concepts from immediate predecessors, yet refused to acknowlege his debt to them. Van Ginneken traces the descendants and heirs of the original authors throughout Europe, using unpublished correspondence to shed light on their mutual relations. Recognizing that LeBon's work was by far the most popular, the success of his work is shown to have a decisive influence on many major political leaders of the twentieth century, ranging from Theodore Roosevelt and Charles de Gaulle to Mussolini and Hitler.

Table of Contents

List of figures, maps and tables
Preface
Introduction
The revolutionary mob: Taine, psychohistory and regression
The criminal crowd: Sighele, criminology and semi-responsibility
A missing link: Fournial, anthropology and the priority debate
The era of the crowd: LeBon, psychopathology and suggestion
The era of the public: Tarde, social psychology and interaction
Summary and conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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