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Distinctive negative reactions to intermediate social groups

Authors :
Sara Emily Burke
Sylvia Perry
John Dovidio
Marianne LaFrance
Source :
Journal of Applied Social Psychology.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Although considerable research has examined how members of advantaged groups think and feelabout disadvantaged groups, fewer studies have examined responses to “intermediate” social groups—groups that are perceived to fall between more commonly acknowledged groups on the same dimension of social identity. We measured judgments of intermediate groups, including novel groups designed to manipulate social group intermediacy (Studies 1-5), Black/White biracial people (Study 6), and bisexual people (Study 7). In each study, participants provided separate evaluations of an intermediate group and two comparison groups (e.g., Black/White biracial people, Black people, White people). Intermediate groups were consistently rated as less conceptually legitimate (e.g., less distinctive, not a “real” group) than other groups. The view that intermediate groups are not “real” groups helped explain negative evaluations of them, and participants who strongly identified with an advantaged ingroup were especially prone to this pattern of judgments. These results are consistent with the idea that an intermediate group can threaten the distinctiveness of a valued ingroup, leading people to dismiss and denigrate the intermediate group. Studying perceptions of intermediate groups facilitates a nuanced account of an increasingly heterogeneous social world.

Subjects

Subjects :
Social Psychology

Details

ISSN :
15591816 and 00219029
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Social Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8cf34ab883a37aea1a6def76ebd484a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jasp.12942