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Social representations are a system of values, ideas, metaphors, beliefs, and practices that serve to establish social order, orient participants and enable communication among the members of groups and communities.Social representation theory is a body of theory within social psychology and sociological social psychology. It has parallels in sociological theorizing such as social constructionism and symbolic interactionism, and is similar in some ways to mass consensus and discursive psychology.
Origin and definition
The term social representation was originally coined by Serge Moscovici in 1961, in his study on the reception and circulation of psychoanalysis in France. It is understood as the collective elaboration "of a social object by the community for the purpose of behaving and communicating". They are further referred to as "system of values, ideas and practices with a twofold function; first, to establish an order which will enable individuals to orient themselves in their material and social world and to master it; and secondly to enable communication to take place among the members of a community by providing them with a code for social exchange and a code for naming and classifying unambiguously the various aspects of their world and their individual and group history". In his study, Moscovici sought to investigate how scientific theories circulate within common sense, and what happens to these theories when they are elaborated upon by a lay public. For such analysis, Moscovici postulated two universes: the reified universe of science, which operates according to scientific rules and procedures and gives rise to scientific knowledge, and the consensual universe of social representation, in which the lay public elaborates and circulates forms of knowledge which come to constitute the content of common sense.
Moscovici's pioneering study described how three segments of French society in the 1950s, i.e. the urban-liberal, the Catholic, and the communist milieus, responded to the challenge of psychoanalytic ideas. Moscovici found that communication processes, the contents, and their consequences differed across the three social segments. Moscovici identified propaganda as the typical communication of the communist milieu, whereby communication is ordered systematically emphasising incompatibility and conflict. The intention is to generate negative stereotypes. Propagation was the typical form of the Catholic segment, identified as didactic and well-ordered but with the intention to make limited concessions to a subgroup of Catholics with affinities to psychoanalysis, and simultaneously, to set limits to the acceptance within the established orthodoxy of the Church. Diffusion was typical of urban-liberal milieus, whereby communication was merely intended to inform people about new opportunities, with little resistance to psychoanalysis.
Anchoring and objectification
Moscovici described two main processes by which the unfamiliar is made familiar: anchoring and objectification. Anchoring involves the ascribing of meaning to new phenomena – objects, relations, experiences, practices, etc. – by means of integrating it into existing worldviews, so it can be interpreted and compared to the "already known". In this way, the threat that the strange and unfamiliar object poses is being erased. In the process of objectification something abstract is turned into something almost concrete.
Social representations, therefore, are depicted as both the process and the result of social construction. In the socio-cognitive activity of representation that produces representations, social representations are constantly converted into a social reality while continuously being re-interpreted, re-thought, re-presented.
Moscovici's theorisation of social representations was inspired by Émile Durkheim's notion of collective representations. The change from collective representations to social representations has been brought about by the societal conditions of modernity.
Interpretation and developments
Social representations should neither be equated with relatively stable collective representations, nor should they be confused with individual, cognitive representations. This has been elaborated by several authors who contributed to the theory: and Barbara Lloyd emphasized the articulation of the individual and the collective in micro-genetic processes of socialization,Wolfgang Wagner theorized about the role of action and social interaction in the construction of social representations, and Sandra Jovchelovitch proposed to regard social representations as a space in-between, at the cross-roads between the individual and society that is the public sphere, that links objects, subjects and activities. Most authors agree that social representations are dynamic elements of knowledge that depend on social conflict and dispute to originate and that have a history of elaboration and change over time. Bauer & Gaskell integrate this view in their formal model relating three elements: subjects, or carriers of the representation; an object, activity, or idea that is represented; and a project of a social group within which the representation makes sense. This conceptualisation is known as the .
There have been various developments within the field since Moscovici's original proposition of the theory. Jean-Claude Abric and his colleagues have explored the structural elements of social representations, distinguishing between core and peripheral elements in terms of the centrality and stability of certain beliefs. This approach has come to be known as the central nucleus theory.Denise Jodelet explored the emotional and symbolic aspects of social representations and their manifestation in everyday practices,Saadi Lahlou explores the relations between social representations and behavior, focusing on eating representations and consumer behaviour. Other important developments have been made by in linking Social identity theory with the theory of social representations, by in elaborating developmental aspects in relation to the micro-genesis of social representations of gender, by and in linking narrative psychology with social representation theory and by Wolfgang Wagner in fathoming the relationship between discursive processes, collective behaviour patterns and the construction of social representations.
Status and prevalence
Despite its long history, social representation theory is popular mainly among European social psychologists. Two of the classic works in the realm of this theory include Moscovici's own seminal work on representations of psychoanalysis in France, and Denise Jodelet's exemplary study of the social representation of madness. However, the theory is far from being a settled doctrine as it attracts ongoing debate and controversy from both social representationists and other theorists. The theory is less known in the United States, partly because much of Moscovici's original work has been published in French.
Bibliography
- Contarello, A. (Ed.) (2023). Embracing change. Knowledge, continuity and social representations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Gillespie, A. (2008) Social representations, alternative representations and semantic barriers [1]. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 38, 4, 376–391.
- Moscovici, Serge (2000). Social representations: Explorations in Social Psychology. Wiley.
- Moscovici, S. (1988). "Notes towards a description of social representations". European Journal of Social Psychology. 18 (3): 211–250. doi:10.1002/ejsp.2420180303.
- Moscovici, S. (1984). "The phenomenon of social representations". Social Representations: 3–69.
- Sammut, Gordon; Howarth, Caroline (2014). "Social representations". In Teo, Thomas (ed.). Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology. New York, NY: Springer. pp. 1799–1802. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5583-7. ISBN 978-1-4614-5582-0.
- Sammut, G., Andreouli, E., Gaskell, G., & Valsiner, J. (eds.) (2015). The Cambridge Handbook of Social Representations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Wagner, W., Duveen, G., Farr, R., Jovchelovitch, S., et al. (1999) Theory and Method of Social Representations. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 2, 95–125.
- Wagner, W. & Hayes, N. (2005). Everyday Discourse and Common Sense-The Theory of Social Representations. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
External links
- Journal: Papers on Social Representations
See also
- Cognitive polyphasia
- Social construction of reality
- Crowd psychology
- Societal psychology
- List of social psychology theories
Citations
- Sammut & Howarth 2014, p. 1800.
- Moscovici, S. (1961). La psychanalyse, son image et son public. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
- Moscovici, S. (1963). Attitudes and opinions. Annual Review of Psychology, 14, 231-260.
- Moscovici, S. (1973). Foreword. In C. Herzlich (Ed.), Health and illness: A social psychological analysis (pp. ix–xiv). London/New York: Academic Press.
- Höijer, B. (2011). "Social Representation Theory", Nordicom Review, 32, 3–16
- Wagner, W. & Hayes, N. (2005). Everyday Discourse and Common-Sense: The Theory of Social Representation. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Jovchelovitch, S. (2007). Knowledge in Context: Representations, community and culture, London: Routledge.
- Alexander, J. C. (1995). Fin de Siècle Social Theory. London: Verso.
- Duveen, G., & Lloyd, B. (Eds). (1990). Social representations and the development of knowledge. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
- Wagner, W. (1996). Queries about social representation and construction. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 26, 95-120.
- Alison, C., Dashtipour, P., Keshet, S., Righi, C., et al. (2009). 'We don’t share! The social representation approach, enactivism and the fundamental incompatibilities between the two'. Culture and Psychology, 15(1), 83-95.
- Jovchelovitch, S. (2019). Knowledge in Context: Representations, Community and Culture. London, UK: Routledge.
- Bauer, M.W. & Gaskell, G. (1999). Towards a Paradigm for Research on Social Representations. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 29(2), 163-186.
- Abric, J.C. (Ed). (1994). Pratiques sociales et representations. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France
- Jodelet, Denise (1991). Ma. Berkeley: University of California.
- Lahlou, S. (1995). Penser Manger, Paris, PUF.
- Howarth, C. (2002). Identity in whose eyes? The role of representations in identity construction.Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 32(2), pp 145-162.
- Laszlo, J. (1997). Narrative organisation of social representations. Papers on Social Representations, 6, (2), 93-190.
- Murray, M. (2002).Connecting narrative and social representation theory in health research. Social Science Information, 41(4), 653-673.
- Wagner, W. (2015). Representation in action. In G. Sammut, E. Andreouli, G. Gaskell, & J. Valsiner (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of Social Representations (pp. 12-28). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- Wagner, W. (2020). Social representation theory: An historical outline. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology, Social Psychology, History and Systems of Psychology.
- Jodelet, D. (1991). Madness and Social Representations. London: Harvester/Wheatsheaf.
- Voelklein, C., & Howarth, C. (2005). A Review of Controversies about Social Representations Theory: A British Debate. Culture & Psychology, 11, 431-454.
- Verheggen, T., & Baerveldt, C. (2007). We don't share! The social representation approach, enactivism and the ground for an intrinsically social psychology. Culture & Psychology, 13(1), 5-27.
Social representations are a system of values ideas metaphors beliefs and practices that serve to establish social order orient participants and enable communication among the members of groups and communities Social representation theory is a body of theory within social psychology and sociological social psychology It has parallels in sociological theorizing such as social constructionism and symbolic interactionism and is similar in some ways to mass consensus and discursive psychology Origin and definitionThe term social representation was originally coined by Serge Moscovici in 1961 in his study on the reception and circulation of psychoanalysis in France It is understood as the collective elaboration of a social object by the community for the purpose of behaving and communicating They are further referred to as system of values ideas and practices with a twofold function first to establish an order which will enable individuals to orient themselves in their material and social world and to master it and secondly to enable communication to take place among the members of a community by providing them with a code for social exchange and a code for naming and classifying unambiguously the various aspects of their world and their individual and group history In his study Moscovici sought to investigate how scientific theories circulate within common sense and what happens to these theories when they are elaborated upon by a lay public For such analysis Moscovici postulated two universes the reified universe of science which operates according to scientific rules and procedures and gives rise to scientific knowledge and the consensual universe of social representation in which the lay public elaborates and circulates forms of knowledge which come to constitute the content of common sense Moscovici s pioneering study described how three segments of French society in the 1950s i e the urban liberal the Catholic and the communist milieus responded to the challenge of psychoanalytic ideas Moscovici found that communication processes the contents and their consequences differed across the three social segments Moscovici identified propaganda as the typical communication of the communist milieu whereby communication is ordered systematically emphasising incompatibility and conflict The intention is to generate negative stereotypes Propagation was the typical form of the Catholic segment identified as didactic and well ordered but with the intention to make limited concessions to a subgroup of Catholics with affinities to psychoanalysis and simultaneously to set limits to the acceptance within the established orthodoxy of the Church Diffusion was typical of urban liberal milieus whereby communication was merely intended to inform people about new opportunities with little resistance to psychoanalysis Anchoring and objectificationMoscovici described two main processes by which the unfamiliar is made familiar anchoring and objectification Anchoring involves the ascribing of meaning to new phenomena objects relations experiences practices etc by means of integrating it into existing worldviews so it can be interpreted and compared to the already known In this way the threat that the strange and unfamiliar object poses is being erased In the process of objectification something abstract is turned into something almost concrete Social representations therefore are depicted as both the process and the result of social construction In the socio cognitive activity of representation that produces representations social representations are constantly converted into a social reality while continuously being re interpreted re thought re presented Moscovici s theorisation of social representations was inspired by Emile Durkheim s notion of collective representations The change from collective representations to social representations has been brought about by the societal conditions of modernity Interpretation and developmentsSocial representations should neither be equated with relatively stable collective representations nor should they be confused with individual cognitive representations This has been elaborated by several authors who contributed to the theory and Barbara Lloyd emphasized the articulation of the individual and the collective in micro genetic processes of socialization Wolfgang Wagner theorized about the role of action and social interaction in the construction of social representations and Sandra Jovchelovitch proposed to regard social representations as a space in between at the cross roads between the individual and society that is the public sphere that links objects subjects and activities Most authors agree that social representations are dynamic elements of knowledge that depend on social conflict and dispute to originate and that have a history of elaboration and change over time Bauer amp Gaskell integrate this view in their formal model relating three elements subjects or carriers of the representation an object activity or idea that is represented and a project of a social group within which the representation makes sense This conceptualisation is known as the There have been various developments within the field since Moscovici s original proposition of the theory Jean Claude Abric and his colleagues have explored the structural elements of social representations distinguishing between core and peripheral elements in terms of the centrality and stability of certain beliefs This approach has come to be known as the central nucleus theory Denise Jodelet explored the emotional and symbolic aspects of social representations and their manifestation in everyday practices Saadi Lahlou explores the relations between social representations and behavior focusing on eating representations and consumer behaviour Other important developments have been made by in linking Social identity theory with the theory of social representations by in elaborating developmental aspects in relation to the micro genesis of social representations of gender by and in linking narrative psychology with social representation theory and by Wolfgang Wagner in fathoming the relationship between discursive processes collective behaviour patterns and the construction of social representations Status and prevalenceDespite its long history social representation theory is popular mainly among European social psychologists Two of the classic works in the realm of this theory include Moscovici s own seminal work on representations of psychoanalysis in France and Denise Jodelet s exemplary study of the social representation of madness However the theory is far from being a settled doctrine as it attracts ongoing debate and controversy from both social representationists and other theorists The theory is less known in the United States partly because much of Moscovici s original work has been published in French BibliographyContarello A Ed 2023 Embracing change Knowledge continuity and social representations Oxford Oxford University Press Gillespie A 2008 Social representations alternative representations and semantic barriers 1 Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 38 4 376 391 Moscovici Serge 2000 Social representations Explorations in Social Psychology Wiley Moscovici S 1988 Notes towards a description of social representations European Journal of Social Psychology 18 3 211 250 doi 10 1002 ejsp 2420180303 Moscovici S 1984 The phenomenon of social representations Social Representations 3 69 Sammut Gordon Howarth Caroline 2014 Social representations In Teo Thomas ed Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology New York NY Springer pp 1799 1802 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5583 7 ISBN 978 1 4614 5582 0 Sammut G Andreouli E Gaskell G amp Valsiner J eds 2015 The Cambridge Handbook of Social Representations Cambridge Cambridge University Press Wagner W Duveen G Farr R Jovchelovitch S et al 1999 Theory and Method of Social Representations Asian Journal of Social Psychology 2 95 125 Wagner W amp Hayes N 2005 Everyday Discourse and Common Sense The Theory of Social Representations New York NY Palgrave Macmillan External linksJournal Papers on Social RepresentationsSee alsoCognitive polyphasia Social construction of reality Crowd psychology Societal psychology List of social psychology theoriesCitationsSammut amp Howarth 2014 p 1800 Moscovici S 1961 La psychanalyse son image et son public Paris Presses Universitaires de France Moscovici S 1963 Attitudes and opinions Annual Review of Psychology 14 231 260 Moscovici S 1973 Foreword In C Herzlich Ed Health and illness A social psychological analysis pp ix xiv London New York Academic Press Hoijer B 2011 Social Representation Theory Nordicom Review 32 3 16 Wagner W amp Hayes N 2005 Everyday Discourse and Common Sense The Theory of Social Representation New York Palgrave Macmillan Jovchelovitch S 2007 Knowledge in Context Representations community and culture London Routledge Alexander J C 1995 Fin de Siecle Social Theory London Verso Duveen G amp Lloyd B Eds 1990 Social representations and the development of knowledge Cambridge England Cambridge University Press Wagner W 1996 Queries about social representation and construction Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 95 120 Alison C Dashtipour P Keshet S Righi C et al 2009 We don t share The social representation approach enactivism and the fundamental incompatibilities between the two Culture and Psychology 15 1 83 95 Jovchelovitch S 2019 Knowledge in Context Representations Community and Culture London UK Routledge Bauer M W amp Gaskell G 1999 Towards a Paradigm for Research on Social Representations Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 29 2 163 186 Abric J C Ed 1994 Pratiques sociales et representations Paris Presses Universitaires de France Jodelet Denise 1991 Ma Berkeley University of California Lahlou S 1995 Penser Manger Paris PUF Howarth C 2002 Identity in whose eyes The role of representations in identity construction Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 32 2 pp 145 162 Laszlo J 1997 Narrative organisation of social representations Papers on Social Representations 6 2 93 190 Murray M 2002 Connecting narrative and social representation theory in health research Social Science Information 41 4 653 673 Wagner W 2015 Representation in action In G Sammut E Andreouli G Gaskell amp J Valsiner Eds The Cambridge Handbook of Social Representations pp 12 28 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Wagner W 2020 Social representation theory An historical outline Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology Social Psychology History and Systems of Psychology Jodelet D 1991 Madness and Social Representations London Harvester Wheatsheaf Voelklein C amp Howarth C 2005 A Review of Controversies about Social Representations Theory A British Debate Culture amp Psychology 11 431 454 Verheggen T amp Baerveldt C 2007 We don t share The social representation approach enactivism and the ground for an intrinsically social psychology Culture amp Psychology 13 1 5 27