Marxist Social Psychology
The application of Marxist analysis to social psychology—examining how capitalist social relations shape individual consciousness, how ideology operates through everyday psychology, and how liberation requires transforming both society and self. Marxist Social Psychology asks: How does capitalism produce particular kinds of subjects? How do class relations shape identity, desire, and belief? How might psychological suffering be connected to social contradictions? Drawing on Marx, critical theory, and psychoanalysis, Marxist Social Psychology insists that the personal is political, that psychology without society is incomplete, and that changing ourselves requires changing the world.
"You're anxious and depressed—maybe it's not just you. Marxist Social Psychology asks: could it be capitalism? Precarious work, social isolation, endless competition—these produce suffering. Individual therapy helps cope; changing society might help heal. Psychology without social analysis blames individuals for systemic problems. Marxist Social Psychology connects inner and outer, personal and political."
Marxist Social Psychology by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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