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The Psychology of Crowd Dynamics
Stephen Reicher
School of Psychology University of St. Andrews
Address for correspondence: Stephen Reicher, School of Psychology, University of St.
Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland. KY 16 9QS. Tel.: +44 (0) 1334 463057. Fax.: +44
(0) 1334 462072. E-mail: sdr@st-andrews.ac.uk
1. The challenge of crowd psychology
Crowds are the elephant man of the social sciences. They are viewed as something
strange, something pathological, something monstrous. At the same time they are viewed
with awe and with fascination. However, above all, they are considered to be something
apart. We may choose to go and view them occasionally as a distraction from the
business of everyday life, but they are separate from that business and tell us little or
nothing about normal social and psychological realities . Such an attitude is reflected in
the remarkable paucity of psychological research on crowd processes and the fact that it
is all but ignored by the dominant paradigms in social psychology. The second edition of
The Handbook of Social Cognition (Wyer Srull, 1994) has no entry in the index under
‘crowd’. Indeed, within a discipline that often views literature from a previous decade as
hopelessly outdated, the little reference that is made to such research still tends to focus
on Gustave Le Bon’s work from a previous century (Le Bon, 1895). As we shall shortly
see, it is most clearly reflected in the content of Le Bon’s research and that of his
followers. It was Le Bon, in terms of his theories if not his practices, who divorced
crowds from their social context. His theory assumed that crowd participaton
extinguishes our normal psychological capacities and reveal a primal nature which is
usually well hidden from view. It was he who, with typical Victorian gusto, consigned
crowds to the realms of a social scientific theatre of curiosities (cf. Reicher, 1996a
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