CROSS-CULTURAL SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES IN STEREOTYPES OF GOOD AND EVIL - A PILOT-STUDY

被引:4
|
作者
FUNKHOUSER, GR
机构
[1] Department of Marketing, National University of Singapore
来源
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 1991年 / 131卷 / 06期
关键词
D O I
10.1080/00224545.1991.9924673
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
An exploratory cross-cultural survey was used to investigate similarities and differences in stereotypes of good and evil. Students from the United States, West Germany (Federal Republic of Germany), Singapore, Nigeria, and Argentina responded projectively to a 62-item questionnaire, completing it as they imagined an extremely "good and viruous," an extremely "wicked and evil," or an extremely "weak and helpless" person would. Two factors consistently emerged: control (the impulse to influence or dominate others) and power (the impulse to accomplish objectives). Stereo-types of good, bad, and helpless were related to extreme positions on these factors, suggesting that the concepts of good and evil are richer than simply opposite poles of a single, evaluative dimension. Strong similarities in factor structures were found across the five samples, but inconsistencies also emerged. In general, control and power appear to have been common across cultures; however, the five samples operationalized them, as well as good and evil, somewhat differently.
引用
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页码:859 / 874
页数:16
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