Just hearing about it makes me feel so humiliated: Emotional and motivational responses to vicarious group-based humiliation

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Abstract

Witnessing a fellow ingroup member being humiliated might be the most common situation in which intergroup humiliation is experienced. Humiliation on a group level is as complex as humiliation on an interpersonal level because of shared appraisals with other emotions. We propose that witnessing a fellow ingroup member being negatively stereotyped by an outgroup member elicits anger and/or shame insofar as it is appraised as vicariously humiliating leading to anger-related approach and shame-related avoidance. Evidence for this proposition was experimentally assessed in three studies using two intergroup contexts: nationality (Study 1: n = 291) and gender (Study 2: n = 429 females and Study 3: n = 353 males). Across these intergroup contexts, the group-devaluing event emphasizing a negative ingroup stereotype evoked anger-related approach and shame-related avoidance indirectly through vicarious humiliation. We conclude that the accompanying emotions and thus resulting motivations determine whether vicarious humiliation results in intergroup conflict.

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Vorster, A., Dumont, K. B., & Waldzus, S. (2021). Just hearing about it makes me feel so humiliated: Emotional and motivational responses to vicarious group-based humiliation. International Review of Social Psychology, 34(1). https://doi.org/10.5334/irsp.458

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