The age of the crowd : a historical treatise on mass psychology

Bibliographic Information

The age of the crowd : a historical treatise on mass psychology

Serge Moscovici ; translated by J.C. Whitehouse

Cambridge University Press , Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 1985

  • : uk
  • : uk : pbk.
  • : fre

Other Title

L'âge des foules

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Note

Bibliography: p. 395-399

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Age of the Crowd is at one level an historical account of the development of mass psychology, and at another an analysis of its implications for prevalent political and social life. It was the prophecy of Gustave Le Bon in 1895 that the twentieth century would be 'l'age des foules' that gave Serge Moscovici the title for his book, and it presents a systematic exposition of Le Bon's ideas and those of Gabriel Tarde, demonstrating convincingly their influence on the theories of collective psychology advanced by Sigmund Freud. These theories are re-examined by Professor Moscovici in a fascinating commentary on political life: Hitler, Mussolini, Lenin, Stalin and Trotsky all in some way applied them in their leadership styles with consequences that are all too familiar. The scenario painted by this volume is a disturbing one. Serge Moscovici's acute analyses of mass phenomena raise fundamental questions concerning the foundations of democracy.

Table of Contents

  • Author's note
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Study of the Masses: 1. The individual and the masses
  • 2. The revolt of the masses
  • 3. What do we do when faced with the masses?
  • 4. Eastern and western varieties of despotism
  • Part II. Le Bon and the Fear of Cowards: 1. Who was Gustave Le Bon?
  • 2. The Machiavelli of mass societies
  • 3. Four reasons for saying nothing
  • 4. The discovery of the masses
  • 5. Mass hypnosis
  • 6. The mental life of crowds
  • Part III. The Crowd, Women and Madness: 1. Collective matter: the impulsive and conservative crowd
  • 2. Collective form: the dogmatic and utopian crowd
  • 3. The leaders of the crowd
  • 4. Charisma
  • 5. The strategies of propaganda and mass suggestion
  • 6. Conclusion
  • Part IV. The Leader Principle: 1. The paradox of mass psychology
  • 2. Natural crowds and artificial crowds
  • 3. The leader principle
  • Part V. Opinion and the Crowd: 1. Communication is the valium of the people
  • 2. Opinion, the public and the crowd
  • 3. The law of the polarisation of prestige
  • 4. The Republic in France: from a democracy of the masses to a democracy of publics
  • Part VI. The Best Disciple of Le Bon and Tarde: Sigmund Freud: 1. The black books of Dr Freud
  • 2. From classical to revolutionary mass psychology
  • 3. The three questions of mass psychology
  • 4. Crowds and the libido
  • 5. The origin of affective attachments in society
  • 6. Eros and mimesis
  • 7. The end of hypnosis
  • Part VII. The Psychology of the Charismatic Leader: 1. Prestige and charisma
  • 2. The postulate of mass psychology
  • 3. The primal secret
  • Part VIII. Hypotheses About Great Men: 1. 'The man Moses'
  • 2. The family romances of great men
  • 3. Creating a people
  • 4. Mosaic and totemic leaders
  • Part IX. Secular Religions: 1. The secret of a religion
  • 2. The prohibition of thought
  • 3. The cult of the father
  • Conclusion: the planetary age of the crowd
  • Notes
  • References
  • Index of names
  • Subject index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA00420600
  • ISBN
    • 0521257743
    • 0521277051
    • 273510110X
  • LCCN
    84029370
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    engfre
  • Original Language Code
    fre
  • Place of Publication
    Cambridge [Cambridgeshire],Paris
  • Pages/Volumes
    vii, 408 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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