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Die, Foul Creature! How the Supernatural Genre Affects Attitudes Toward Outgroups Through Strength of Human Identity

机译:死了,犯规!超自然体裁如何通过人类身份认同感影响对外向群体的态度

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摘要

The presence of non-humans in media narratives - for example, in the supernatural genre - may make salient that we are all human. According to the common ingroup identity model, the human superordinate category should influence attitudes toward lower-level outgroups. The present study examines this in the context of ethnic outgroups, specifically African Americans. Similarity of supernatural villains to humans was manipulated to influence whether “human” was a relevant superordinate group. Additionally, character race was varied to understand the influence of group diversity cues. Consistent with the common ingroup identity model, exposure to a Black human character fighting non-humans reduces prejudice toward African Americans, and this reduced prejudice generalizes to other minority groups. Results suggest a complex relationship between exposure to supernatural villains and diversity cues on attitudinal outcomes, with identity as human as one possible mechanism for reducing prejudicial attitudes.
机译:在媒体叙事中(例如在超自然类型中)非人类的存在可能会凸显我们都是人类。根据常见的群体内认同模型,人类上级类别应影响对下层群体的态度。本研究在种族群体,特别是非裔美国人的背景下对此进行了研究。操纵了超自然反派与人类的相似性,以影响“人类”是否是相关的上级群体。另外,为了了解群体多样性线索的影响,角色种族也有所不同。与常见的群体身份模型一致,与非人类战斗的黑人人物角色暴露可减少对非裔美国人的偏见,并且这种减少的偏见普遍适用于其他少数群体。结果表明,超自然反派的暴露与态度结果的多样性线索之间存在复杂的关系,将人的身份作为减少偏见态度的一种可能机制。

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