Affiliation:
1. Universit‰t Bielefeld
2. University of Ioannina
Abstract
Research has shown that women’s level of rape myth acceptance (RMA) moderates the impact of rape salience on their self-esteem. Conceptually replicating previous studies where rape salience was operationalized by presenting newspaper articles, the present study featured a realistic expectation of meeting a rape victim. Female students ( N= 82) who were either low or high in RMA expected a conversation with another woman about one of three topics: studying, the other woman’s illness (leukemia), or the other woman’s experience of having been raped. Then their collective self-esteem, individual self-esteem, and affect were assessed. In line with predictions, low-RMA women reported lower self-esteem in the rape condition than in the studying condition, whereas high-RMA participants showed an opposite effect. Although affect was generally lower in the rape condition than in the neutral condition, this effect was significantly more pronounced for low-RMA than high-RMA women. Results for the leukemia condition differed from those in the rape condition, confirming the content-specificity of the moderating effect of RMA.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology
Reference13 articles.
1. Salience of Rape Affects Self-Esteem: Individual versus Collective Self-Aspects
2. Bohner, G. & Sturm, S. (1997). Evaluative Aspekte sozialer Identit‰t bei Frauen und M‰nnern: Eine Skala des Kollektiven Selbstwerts in bezug auf das Geschlecht (KSW-G) [Evaluative aspects of social identity in women and men: A scale of collective self-esteem regarding gender] . Psychologische Beitr‰ge, 39, 322–335 .
3. Salience of rape affects self-esteem: The moderating role of gender and rape myth acceptance
4. Cultural myths and supports for rape.
5. The Scree Test For The Number Of Factors
Cited by
27 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献