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This book was conceptualized as an effort to provide for a Western reader not familiar with psychology in the East, a broad outline of Ukrainian Psychology within the socio-historical context. Since the 1950s there were few publications in the USA that described psychology in the former Soviet Union (Bauer, 1962; Brozek & Mecacci, 1974; Brozek & Slobin, 1972; Rahman, 1973; Raznor, 1971). Unfortunately, some authors identified psychologists in the Soviet Union as "Russian psychologists." Only two articles (Holowinsky, 1978, 1987 specifically discussed Ukrainian Psychology.Since the 1991 declaration of independence in the Ukraine, psychologists in the Ukraine are attempting to establish scholarly cooperation with the mainstream of Western psychology. As indicated by Professor Charles A. Maher, "this book will be valuable to scholars, researchers, and practitioners, who want to learn about an important but somewhat neglected aspect of the history of tradition of psychology."
Ivan Z. Holowinsky is Professor Emeritus at Rutgers University where he was a member of the graduate school's psychology faculty.
Part 1 ForewordPart 2 PrefacePart 3 AcknowledgmentsChapter 4 IntroductionChapter 5 The Emergence of Ukrainian Culture and Its Unique AspectsChapter 6 From Philosophy to PsychologyChapter 7 19th Century and Beginning of the 20th CenturyChapter 8 Early Soviet Psychology and PedologyChapter 9 Ukrainian Psychology in the 1920s and Early 1930sChapter 10 Ukrainian "Soviet" PsychologyChapter 11 Ukrainian Psychologists in DiasporaChapter 12 Trends since the Declaration of IndependenceChapter 13 Future Challenges for Ukrainian PsychologyPart 14 ReferencesPart 15 Name IndexPart 16 IndexPart 17 About the Author