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The article provides an introduction to and overview of cultural psychology. It begins by introducing the three major figures of the Vygotsky Circle in the 1920s and 30s: Lev Vygotsky, Alexander Luria, and Aleksei Leontiev. Their collaboration is important not least because it demonstrates that study of culture and of neurobiology are not opposed lines of investigation but complementary. It also provides context to the founding of the International Society for Cultural and Activity Research (Iscar) in 2002 through merger of the International Society for Cultural Research and Activity Theory (Iscrat) and the Conference for Sociocultural Research. The article then briefly sketches the history of cultural psychology in the English-speaking world and introduces some of the major figures. It turns to consider Vygotsky’s project in more detail, explaining his diagnosis of the crisis in the psychology of his time and his solution for avoiding dualism. It then focuses on the key features of Vygotsky’s account of children’s development, outlining his reconstruction of the stages and transitions of ontogenesis and offering an interpretation of the process of internalization. It concludes with a discussion of research methodology in cultural psychology, explaining how it differs from the quasi-experimental designs that are typical in cross-cultural psychology.

Martin John Packer, Investigador independiente

Independient researcher
Packer, M. J. (2019). Cultural Psychology: An Introduction and Overview. Avances En Psicología Latinoamericana, 37(3). https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/apl/a.7882

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