Back to Search Start Over

Culture and group-based emotions: could group-based emotions be dialectical?

Authors :
Kosuke Takemura
Bertjan Doosje
Satoko Suzuki
Minjie Lu
Takeshi Hamamura
Sociale Psychologie (Psychologie, FMG)
Source :
Cognition & Emotion, 31(5), 937-949. Taylor and Francis Ltd.
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2016.

Abstract

Group-based emotions are experienced when individuals are engaged in emotion-provoking events that implicate the in-group. This research examines the complexity of group-based emotions, specifically a concurrence of positive and negative emotions, focusing on the role of dialecticism, or a set of folk beliefs prevalent in Asian cultures that views nature and objects as constantly changing, inherently contradictory, and fundamentally interconnected. Study 1 found that dialecticism is positively associated with the complexity of Chinese participants' group-based emotions after reading a scenario depicting a positive intergroup experience. Study 2 found that Chinese participants experienced more complex group-based emotions compared with Dutch participants in an intergroup situation and that this cultural difference was mediated by dialecticism. Study 3 manipulated dialecticism and confirmed its causal effect on complex group-based emotions. These studies also suggested the role of a balanced appraisal of an intergroup situation as a mediating factor.

Details

ISSN :
14640600 and 02699931
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cognition and Emotion
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa235e94b356d032745d8d2d07112ee9