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Social representations of aggression: Crossing the sex barrier

โœ Scribed by ANNE CAMPBELL; STEVEN MUNCER; ALISON GUY; MAURA BANIM


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
1015 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0046-2772

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โœฆ Synopsis


Controversy over Moscovici's concept of social representations has focused upon the extent to which they can be viewed as enduring cognitive structures characterizing social groups and whether individual members are prisoners' of their social representations, unable to duplicate the social representations of other socialgroups. Previous reseurch has established a consistent gender difference in orientation toward aggression with men viewing it as an instrumental act of coercion and women as a temporary loss of seucontrol. These two social representations, originally recovered from spontaneous conversation, have been measured with a psychometric instrument called Expagg. To examine the mutability of these representations. men and women in the present study were asked to complete the questionnaire either spontaneously or as they believed a member of the opposite sex might respond. Under conditions of same-sex responding the usualsignificant sex difference appeared. When asked to respond as a member of the opposite sex, men accurately mirrored women's higher expressive total score on the questionnaire but psychometric analysis revealed that there was no similarity in terms of item-total correlations. Women grossly overestimated the degree of men's instrumentality but item--total total correlations revealed a considerable degree of similarity with men's structure. The male representution whether natural or assumed showed higher internal consistency than did the female mode. The results are discussed in terms of differential modes of access to gender-linked representations and the cultural dominance of a masculine and instrumental representation of aggression.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Sex and social representations of aggres
โœ Anne Campbell; Steven Muncer; Bernard Gorman ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1993 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 669 KB

suggests that men and women hold different social representations or implicit theories of their own aggression. Men view it is an instrumental act (a means of obtaining and exercising power to gain social rewards), while women view it an expressive act (a cathartic discharge of anger). In the presen