Auteurs
Jacques-Philippe Leyens, Paola M Paladino, Ramon Rodriguez-Torres, Jeroen Vaes, Stephanie Demoulin, Armando Rodriguez-Perez, Ruth Gaunt
Date de publication
2000/5
Revue
Personality and social psychology review
Volume
4
Numéro
2
Pages
186-197
Éditeur
Sage Publications
Description
If people favor their ingroup, are especially concerned with their own group, and attribute different essences to different groups, it follows that their essence must be superior to the essence of other groups. Intelligence, language, and certain emotions are all considered to be distinctive elements of human nature or essence. The role of inteligence and language in discrimination, prejudice, and racism has already been largely investigated, and this article focuses on attributed emotions. Specifically, we investigate the idea that secondary emotions are typically human characteristics, and as such, they should be especially associated with and attributed to the ingroup. Seondary emotions may even be denied to outgroups. These differential associations and attributions of specifically human emotions to ingroups versus outgroups should affect intergroup relations. Results from several initial experiments are summarized …
Nombre total de citations
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Articles Google Scholar
JP Leyens, PM Paladino, R Rodriguez-Torres, J Vaes… - Personality and social psychology review, 2000