African Psychology: The Psychological Adjustment of African Women Living in New Zealand
Mots-clés :
social representation, African immigrants, African psychology, decolonised psychologyRésumé
Social representation theory is a social psychological framework of concepts and ideas relevant to
studying psychosocial phenomena in modern societies. It suggests that social psychological
phenomenon and processes can only be properly understood when they are anchored in history,
culture and macro social conditions. Therefore, social representations are carriers of collective
memories of social groups which are adequate for shaping the present through the past; while
using the past to meet the demands of the present, which enables social groups to continue through
time. Social groups are distinct in terms of their understanding of social phenomenon and other
forms of action which in turn constitute their identity. In this article, I present an African
psychological framework which represents African people’s worldview. Further to this, is my
experience as a doctoral student, exploring the psychological adjustment of African women living
in New Zealand. I reflect on why the framework that I had used in my research were deemed
inadequate to be used as psychological principles, because they did not correspond with a Western
lens of understanding behaviour, actions and social reality. I conclude that the outcome of my
study shows the reification and legitimization of Western psychology over African psychology.
This article provides a possibility for a critical account of unequal social relations between
Western psychology and Indigenous psychology, and exposes the issue of power and resistance
embedded in the heart of social representation theories as it relates to psychology.