1. The virtues and vices of social comparisons: examining assimilative and contrastive emotional reactions to characters in a narrative
- Author
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K. Maja Krakowiak and Mina Tsay-Vogel
- Subjects
Social comparison theory ,Virtue ,Social Psychology ,Salience (language) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Contempt ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Morality ,050105 experimental psychology ,Character (mathematics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Narrative ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common ,Moral character - Abstract
Based on social comparison theory, this study investigates how awareness of one’s morality and exposure to a character in a narrative affect emotions associated with four types of social comparisons—upward assimilative, downward contrastive, upward contrastive, and downward assimilative. A 2 (Morality Salience: virtue, vice) X 2 (Character: moral, immoral) experiment (N = 106) revealed that those whose vices were made salient elicited stronger: (1) contempt (a downward contrastive emotion) toward an immoral character than a moral character, and (2) envy (an upward contrastive emotion) toward a moral character than an immoral character. Whereas envy decreased positive affect, contempt increased it. Implications for assimilative and contrastive social comparisons with media characters that lead to distinct affective outcomes are discussed.
- Published
- 2019