Zaks L.A. (2014) Psychology and culturology: A means of cooperating and problems associated with cooperation. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 8(2), 14-26.
The article discloses the main potential aspects of cooperation between psychology and
culturology, which are connected through their mutual determination of the psyche (psychic
reality) and culture. The paper acknowledges the key importance of the cultural-historical
traditions initiated by Lev Vygotsky and his successors as well as the idea that their
potential has yet to be realized by contemporary psychology. A new vision of culture is
given to culturology (in comparison with traditional cultural studies) and its significance
in conducting modern psychological research: a novel problematization of psychology’s
subject matter and its methodological support. Different aspects of the psyche’s cultural
determination, the experience with cultural psychology (historical psychology) in researching
historical mental types (“Annals school”) are reviewed alongside with the role
of culture knowledge in analyzing the psychological results of this determination. The
consistency of culture and its components represented and internalized by mental structures
is announced as a fundamental cultural basis of psychological research. The return
influence of psychological phenomena on culture’s various aspects, as well as related cultural
and psychological problems, are determined by the fundamental place and role of
the psyche in any given cultural system as well as the contradictions that exist between a
culture and the psyche. All this requires further examination. One of the most vital contemporary
challenges facing psychology is the problem of the mental peculiarities of the
consciousness, which can be principally explained in terms of a consistent culturological
approach. Interrelationships between the psyche’s properties and conscious cultural
functions are shown through example of aesthetic attitude.
Мironenko I.A. (2014) Integrative and isolationist tendencies in contemporary Russian psychological science. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 8(2), 4-13.
Contemporary Russian psychology faces an uphill battle in joining the international
mainstream after decades of isolation. Among Russian psychologists today, we can see
traces of the “globalist” (integrative) and “counter-globalist” (isolationist) tendencies that
first manifested during the Soviet period. At that time, Russian psychology was shaped
as a mono-methodological trend; it addressed fundamental theoretical problems, was
based on Marxist philosophy and was oriented to reflect the standards of the natural
sciences. In the post-Soviet period, fundamental social changes shifted the development
of psychology as a science and different standards were adopted. Contemporary Russian
psychology is substantially diversified. When searching for “the optimum level of integration”
with global peers, it is necessary to take into account the theoretical and methodological
orientations of the scientists, as their motives and constraints with respect
to integration can be substantially different. Here we explain in detail how the different
theoretical understandings and predilections of Russian psychologists determine their
interests, ideals and constraints with respect to integration with the mainstream.