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Social Psych: groups, prejudice and social identity - Coggle Diagram
Social Psych: groups, prejudice and social identity
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groups
Volkan (2009)
large group identity, international relations and psychoanalysis
Collective Narcissism
Golec de Zavala (2023)
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Collective narcissism is an evaluative, emotionally laden, and unrealistic (biased) belief about an ingroup. Overly positive evaluation of ingroup and its entitledness and deservingess
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motivated social cognition -> satisfy individual psychological needs. Need to believe group is great to buttress against low self esteem and vulnerable self image
collective narcisissm helps explain inconsistent findings re link between self-esteem, ingroup identification, perceived ingroup threat and integroup hostility
National collective narcissism has been linked to prejudice toward national
minorities and immigrants.
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Bocian et al (2021)
judgments about actions of ingroup and outgroup members depend on the strength and type of ingroup commitment as well as perceptions of ingroup interests
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collective narcs had biased moral judgments of actions supporting ingroup interests. Normal people made positive biased moral judgments of outgroups actions
used leader transgressions! might be people make different judgments on authorities. Replication needed
Cichocka (2016)
defensive (narcissistic) in-group positivity predicts undesirable out-group and in-group outcomes, secure (non-narcissistic) in-group positivity predicts desirable out-group and in-group outcomes
frustration vs. satisfaction of individual needs can affect ways in which people identify with social groups
collective narcissism predicts a greater concern with how the group’s image reflects on the individual and a lesser concern with benefiting the in-group.
robust predictor of intergroup hostility, collective narcissism
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social identity theory
definition: “the part of an individual’s self-concept, which derives from his knowledge of his membership in a social group (or groups) together with the value and emotional significance attached to that group
membership” (Tajfel, 1981)