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Positive psychology: A Foucauldian critique

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:17 authored by Matthew McDonald, Jean O'Callaghan
This article analyzes and critiques some of the "truth claims" of positive psychology by applying Foucault's concepts of power/knowledge, discipline, and governmentality. It illustrates how positive psychology deploys mechanisms to devalue, subjugate, and discredit humanistic psychology. It also illustrates how positive psychology privileges particular modes of functioning by classifying and categorizing character strengths and virtues, supporting a neo-liberal economic and political discourse. Last, it offers an alternative position to the prescriptive and constraining ideology of positive psychology. Such a position enables a meta-perspective and reflexivity that could sustain a flexible approach to understanding key issues like human happiness and well-being, as well as open the way for a more productive, rather than adversarial, dialogue, with humanistic psychology.

History

Journal

The Humanistic Psychologist

Volume

36

Issue

2

Start page

127

End page

142

Total pages

16

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

Former Identifier

2006049531

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-20

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