Stereotypes as Historical Accidents: Images of Social Class in Postcommunist Versus Capitalist Societies

Author:

Grigoryan Lusine1ORCID,Bai Xuechunzi2,Durante Federica3,Fiske Susan T.2,Fabrykant Marharyta4,Hakobjanyan Anna5,Javakhishvili Nino6,Kadirov Kamoliddin7,Kotova Marina4,Makashvili Ana6,Maloku Edona8ORCID,Morozova-Larina Olga9,Mullabaeva Nozima7,Samekin Adil10,Verbilovich Volha4,Yahiiaiev Illia9

Affiliation:

1. Ruhr University Bochum, Germany

2. Princeton University, NJ, USA

3. University of Milano–Bicocca, Italy

4. National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia

5. Yerevan State University, Armenia

6. Ilia State University, Tbilisi, Georgia

7. National University of Uzbekistan named after Mirzo Ulugbek, Tashkent, Uzbekistan

8. RIT Kosovo (A.U.K), Prishtina, Kosovo

9. Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine

10. S. Toraighyrov Pavlodar State University, Kazakhstan

Abstract

Stereotypes are ideological and justify the existing social structure. Although stereotypes persist, they can change when the context changes. Communism’s rise in Eastern Europe and Asia in the 20th century provides a natural experiment examining social-structural effects on social class stereotypes. Nine samples from postcommunist countries ( N = 2,241), compared with 38 capitalist countries ( N = 4,344), support the historical, sociocultural rootedness of stereotypes. More positive stereotypes of the working class appear in postcommunist countries, both compared with other social groups in the country and compared with working-class stereotypes in capitalist countries; postcommunist countries also show more negative stereotypes of the upper class. We further explore whether communism’s ideological legacy reflects how societies infer groups’ stereotypic competence and warmth from structural status and competition. Postcommunist societies show weaker status–competence relations and stronger (negative) competition–warmth relations; respectively, the lower meritocratic beliefs and higher priority of embeddedness as ideological legacies may shape these relationships.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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