Carlos Cornejo's book review on my Von Kunst bis Terror led me to the need to chart out a number of central issues in contemporary psychology that cultural psychology is in a position to resolve. Human subjectivity in all of its richness remains the core of investigation for all psychology, and cultural psychology has a central role to play in innovating psychology's research practices.
Boesch, E.E. (1963). Raum und Zeit als Valenzsysteme. In Hiltmann & Vonessen (Eds.), Dialektik und Dynamik der Person (pp. 135-154). Cologne: Kiepenheuer & Witsch. (English in Lonner & Hayes, 2007)
2.
Boesch, E.E. (1983). Das Magische und das Schöne. Stuttgart: Frommann-Holzboog.
3.
Boesch, E.E. (1991). Symbolic action theory and cultural psychology . Berlin/ New York: Springer.
4.
Boesch, E.E. (1995) L'action symbolique. Fondements de psychologie culturelle. Paris: L'Harmattan. (Translation and revision of 1991)
5.
Boesch, E.E. (1997). Reasons for a symbolic concept of action. Culture & Psychology, 3, 423-431.
6.
Boesch, E.E. (1998). Sehnsucht-Von der Suche nach Glück und Sinn. Bern: Huber.
7.
Boesch, E.E. (2000). Das lauernde Chaos: Mythen und Fiktionen im Alltag . Bern: Huber.
8.
Boesch, E.E. (2005). Von Kunst bis Terror: Über den Zwiespalt in der Kultur. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
9.
Boesch, E.E. (in press). Self-awareness. In P. Chakkarath & J. Straub (Eds.), Culturalization of the self. Charlotte, NC: Information Age.
10.
Cornejo, C. (2007). The locus of subjectivity in cultural studies . Culture & Psychology, 13, 243-256.
11.
Lonner, W.J., & Hayes, S.A. (2007). Discovering cultural psychology: A profile and selected readings of Ernest E. Boesch. Charlotte, NC: Information Age.