1. Psychology, Society and Subjectivity: An Introduction to German Critical Psychology (Critical Psychology Series), by Charles Tolman, Routledge, 1994 (accessible via questia)
2. Critical Psychology: Contributions to an Historical Science of the Subject, ed. by Charles Tolman, et al., Cambridge University Press, 1991
In this volume, Klaus Holzkamp and his colleagues provide a coherent and broadly elaborated description of Critical Psychology--a theory of the evolution of the social constitution of human consciousness and forms of mental activity--which has been in development in Germany for more than twenty years and constitutes a radical critique and reconstruction of scientific psychology from a dialectical and historical- materialistic point of view. Its aim is to provide a firmer foundation than presently exists for a psychology that is methodologically sound, practically relevant, and theoretically determinate. In this volume, Tolman and Maiers coordinate the contributions of several German psychologists led by Klaus Holzkamp and his colleagues. Infused with theoretical sophistication, the papers detail the implications of Critical Psychology on several fronts: a theory of emotions, forms of psychotherapy, the impact of automation in the workplace, and a theory of learning. Chapters build upon each other, going from general issues of methodology to more specific issues. Critical Psychology: Contributions to an Historical Science of the Subject is the first book to make Critical Psychology accessible to an English-speaking audience. (amazon)
3. Psychology from the Standpoint of the Subject: Selected Writings of Klaus Holzkamp (Critical Theory and Practice in Psychology and the Human Sciences), by K. Holzkamp, ed. by E. Schraube, et al., Palgrave Macmillan, 2013 (accessible via FJU)
4. Teo, Thomas (1998) KLAUS HOLZKAMP AND THE RISE AND DECLINE OF GERMAN CRITICAL PSYCHOLOGY, History of Psychology, Vol. 1, No. 3, 235-253
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5viXpvvYMYEUVc2dE1sYjl6SEU/view?usp=sharing