1st Edition

Margins of the Mind

By Frank Musgrove Copyright 1977
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    ‘Psychologists have mapped out developmental stages for the first fifteen to twenty years; but thereafter life is a blank. Half a century of adult life remains, psychologically speaking, an unchartered waste.’ Frank Musgrove focuses on the question ‘Can adults change?’ and challenges the still widely-held view that adult life is static.

    Originally published in 1977, the author examines change principally in terms of a modification of consciousness through the experience of marginality. With the help of interviews, he discusses seven groups in contemporary Britain at the time, found in the ‘margins’ of society. Three of the selected groups are involuntary and stigmatized: men and women who have gone blind as adults; handicapped people in a home for the incurably disabled; and homosexuals. The other four groups enjoy high-status and voluntary marginality: late-entrants to the Anglican ministry; self-employed artists; a Sufi commune of Islamic mystics; and a Hare Krishna commune.

    Frank Musgrove’s lively study of adult resocialization will be of interest to sociologists, anthropologists and anyone concerned with the general problem of adjustment to rapid social change. It also relates marginality to the issue of life-long learning and points to some of the creative possibilities of the marginal situation.

    Author’s note.  1. Aspects of Change in Adult Life  2. Orientations to the Centre: Passing and Coming Out  3. Becoming a Parson: Change of Life-Plan and the Voice of God  4. Artists: Precarious Identities in Private Worlds  5. A Home for the Disabled: A Change of Tense  6. The World of the Blind: A Supernormality  7. The Homosexual as Stranger  8. Dervishes in Dorsetshire: Re-alignment with Reality  9. Demons and Devotees: Hare Krishna and the Transformation of Consciousness  10. Can Adults Really Change?  Notes to Chapters.  Index.

    Biography

    Frank Musgrove