Authors
W Keith Campbell, Eric A Rudich, Constantine Sedikides
Publication date
2002/3
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume
28
Issue
3
Pages
358-368
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
The authors hypothesized that both narcissism and high self-esteem are associated with positive self-views but each is associated with positivity in different domains of the self. Narcissists perceive themselves as better than average on traits reflecting an agentic orientation (e.g., intellectual skills, extraversion) but not on those reflecting a communal orientation (e.g., agreeableness, morality). In contrast, high-self-esteem individuals perceive themselves as better than average both on agentic and communal traits. Three studies confirmed the hypothesis. In Study 1, narcissists rated themselves as extraverted and open to experience but not as more agreeable or emotionally stable. High-self-esteem individuals rated themselves highly on all of these traits except openness. In Study 2, narcissists (but not high-self-esteem individuals) rated themselves as better than their romantic partners. In Study 3, narcissists rated …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WK Campbell, EA Rudich, C Sedikides - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2002
EA Rudich, C Sedikides, WK Campbell - Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2002