References
- Frank, T. (2005). What’s the matter with Kansas?: How conservatives won the heart of America. N.Y.: Holt.
- Jacoby, S. (2008). The age of American unreason. New York: Pantheon.
- Jimenez-Dominguez, B. (2009). Ignacio Martín-Baró’s Social Psychology of Liberation: Situated knowledge and Critical Commitment against Objectivism. In Montero, M., & Sonn, C. (Eds). Psychology of Liberation: Theory and Applications. N.Y.: Springer
- Knight, N. 2007. Rethinking Mao: Explorations in Mao Zedung’s thought. Mass: Lexington Books, p. 98.
- Martin-Baro, I. (1994). Writings for a liberation psychology. Cambridge: Harvard University Press
- Montero, M., & Sonn, C. (2009). Psychology of Liberation: Theory and Applications. N.Y.: Springer
- Nash, R. (2003). Inequality/difference in New Zealand education: Social reproduction and the cognitive habitus. International Study in Sociology of Education, 13, 171–191; p. 174.
- Ratner, C. (2009). Cooperativism: A Social, Economic, and Political Alternative to Capitalism. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 20, 2, 44–73.
- Ratner, C. (2008). Cultural psychology and qualitative methodology: Scientific and political considerations. Culture and Psychology, 14, 259–288. Ranter, C. (forthcoming). Macro cultural psychology: A political philosophy of mind. N.Y.: Oxford University Press.
- Ratner, C. Epistemological, Social, and Political Conundrums in Social Constructionism. Forum Qualitative Social Research, Oct.. 2006, vol.6, #3. (online at my web site)
- Ratner, C. (1991). Vygotsky’s sociohistorical psychology and its contemporary applications. N.Y.: Plenum, pp. 264–278 for additional examples and discussion.
- Schram, S. & Hodes, N. (Eds.) Mao ’s road to power: Revolutionary writings 1912–1949, vol. IV, Armonk: Sharpe, 1997
- Wikan, U. (2008). In Honor of Fadime. Murder and Shame. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.