First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.Prologue. Preface. C. Sedikides, M.B. Brewer,Individual Self, Relational Self, and Collective Self: Partners, Opponents, or Strangers? Part I: The Individual Self asBasis for Self-definition.C. Sedikides, L.A. Gaertner,A Homecoming to the Individual Self: Emotional and Motivational Primacy. S. Klein,A Self to Remember: A Cognitive Neuropsychological Perspective on How Self Creates Memory and Memory Creates Self. E.T. Higgins, D.May,Individual Self-regulatory Functions: It's Not We Regulation, but It's Still Social. Part II: TheRelational and Collective Selves as Bases forSelf-Definition.D.M. Tice, R.F. Baumeister,The Primacy of the Interpersonal Self. A. Aron, T. McLaughlin-Volpe,Including Others in the Self: Extensions to Own and Partner's Group Memberships. E.R. Smith, S. Coats,J, J. Murphy,The Self and Attachment to Relational Partners and Groups: Theoretical Parallels and New Insights. M.A. Hogg,A Social Identity and the Sovereignty of the Group: A Psychology of Belonging. Part III: International Perspectives on the Individual,Relational and Collective Self.R.S. Onorato, J.C.Turner,The I , the Me and the Us : The Psychological Group and Self-concept Maintenance and Change. R.Spears,The Interaction Between the Individual and the Collective Self: Self-categorization in Context. B.Simon, C. Kampmeier,Revisiting the Individual Self: Towards a Social Psychological Theory of the Individual Self and the Collective Self. M.B. Brewer, S. RoccaslÓQ