

Peter Lunt
Peter Lunt was born in 1956 and educated at the Universities of London and Oxford, receiving his doctoral degree in 1988. He and his graduate students conduct research on various topics in social psychology, the media, and communications.
His initial research and graduate training were in social psychology, looking at the way that lay people explain complex phenomena. After this he developed a line of research in consumption or economic psychology (initially in collaboration with Sonia Livingstone at the London School of Economics) which examined the motivations for saving, borrowing, or spending, the meanings of possessions, the psychology of shopping, generational differences in consumption, and lay accounts of consumption. This research was published with Sonia Livingstone in "Mass Consumption and Personal Identity" (Open University Press, 1992).
A second line of research, again developed in collaboration with Sonia Livingstone, has been concerned with the role of the media in public participation and debate. In "Talk on Television" (Routledge, 1994) and various subsequent papers, he has examined the character, reception, and impact of new forms of participatory programming such as audience discussion programmes. These ideas are related to social theoretical debates over the public sphere.
Peter has also published a number of articles on the history of Social Psychology and recently published an intellectual biography of Stanley Milgram published by Palgrave/MacMillan
Primary Interests:
- Applied Social Psychology
- Communication, Language
- Group Processes
- Social Cognition
- Sociology, Social Networks
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Image Gallery
Video Gallery
Common Action Forum Interview With Peter Lunt
The Life and Work of Erving Goffman: A Conversation
Books:
- Livingstone, S., & Lunt, P. (1994). Talk on television: Audience participation and public debate. London: Routledge.
- Lunt, P. (2009). Stanley Milgram: Understanding obedience and its implications. London: Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN: 978-0-230-57315-4
- Lunt, P. K., & Livingstone, S. M. (1992). Mass consumption and personal identity: Everyday economic experience. Maidenhead, Berkshire, UK: Open University Press.
- Lunt, P., & Livingstone, S. (2011). Media regulation: Governance and the interests of citizens and consumers. London: SAGE Publications.
Journal Articles:
- Brown, S. D., & Lunt, P. (2002). A genealogy of the social identity tradition: Deleuze and Guattari and social psychology. British Journal of Social Psychology, 41, 1-23.
- Kokkinaki, F., & Lunt, P. (1999). The effect of advertising message involvement on brand attitude accessibility. Journal of Economic Psychology 20(1), 41-51.
- Kokkinaki, F., & Lunt, P. (1997). The relationship between involvement, attitude accessibility and attitude-behaviour consistency. British Journal of Social Psychology, 36, 497-509.
- Lunt, P. (2009). Television, public participation, and public service: From value consensus to the politics of identity. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 625(1), 128-138.
- Lunt, P. (2004). Questions of definition scope in economic theories of altruism: A commentary on 'What is altruism?' by Elias Khalil. Journal of Economic Psychology, 25(1), 135-139.
- Lunt, P. (2002). The reciprocal modular brain in economics and politics: Shaping the rational and moral basis of organization, exchange and choice. Journal of Economic Psychology, 23(1), 157-159.
- Lunt, P. (1996). Discourse of savings. Journal of Economic Psychology, 17(6), 677-690.
- Lunt, P., & Stenner, P. (2005). The Jerry Springer Show as an emotional public sphere. Media Culture & Society, 27(1), pp. 59.
- Olivero, N., & Lunt, P. (2004). Privacy versus willingness to disclose in e-commerce exchanges: The effect of risk awareness on the relative role of trust and control. Journal of Economic Psychology, 25(2), 243-262.
Courses Taught:
- Social Psychology
Peter Lunt
Bankfield House
Department of Media & Communication
University of Leicester
Leicester LE1 7JA
United Kingdom
- Phone: +44 (0)1895 274000
- Fax: +44 (0)1895 203018