For more than a quarter of a century, the subject matter of social psychology has been approached from two conceptual vantage points that have remained oddly and unnecessarily estranged from one another. These are experimental social psychology and social constructionism. Mainstream social psychology has been largely dominated by experimentalists who see their own methods as providing the best (and perhaps only) way of garnering cumulative knowledge about We thankKen Gergen, Eliot Smith, Wolfgang Stroebe, and several anonymous reviewers for extremely helpful comments on an earlier version of this article. We are grateful as well to Curtis Hardin, Tory Higgins, Lawrence Jost, Bill Kessen, andBill McGuixe for helpful discussions ofthese issues over the years. Portions ofthis article were presented by ArieW.