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Journal Article

Citation

Winter DG. Polit. Psychol. 2000; 21(2): 383-404.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, International Society of Political Psychology, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/0162-895X.00194

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Power, sex, and violence are three themes that characterize a good deal of 20th-century experience. Connections among these themes can be demonstrated through archival and field studies and by laboratory experiments, in the core disciplines of political psychology as well as in literature and art. Understanding and explaining this power-sex-violence fusion is an urgent theoretical and practical imperative. Two tasks are especially critical: understanding the nature of power-striving and how it might be tempered, and understanding how and why people construct "differences" among themselves. With its broad interdisciplinary tradition, its variety of traditional and innovative methods, and its links to the real world of human affairs, political psychology is well placed to assume this intellectual agenda.


Language: en

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