Kurt Danziger's book, Constructing the Subject: Historical Origins of Psychological Research, is often considered exemplary of this approach.
[5][6] The realization that previous histories had been celebratory led to a search for subjects who had been dismissed for reasons unrelated to their own merit.
[7][8] This effort continues to rediscover extremely significant contributions by women to the formation of psychology, which had become invisible as a result of the way in which the old histories had been written.
[13][14] When a university employs a specialist Historian of Psychology to do original research and teach the history course required for accreditation, there is usually only one on staff.
However, there are three large research groups in the world that work in English and also offer a PhD: There are many lower-level programs.