Racialized Emotions When Thinking about Slavery: Associations Between Group Identification and Feelings of Threat, Shame, and Guilt Among White Americans

IF 1.8 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Social Currents Pub Date : 2023-04-26 DOI:10.1177/23294965231168781
Ashley V. Reichelmann
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Abstract

This paper highlights the relationship between group identification and racialized emotions among white Americans when asked to think about slavery on U.S. soil. Previous scholarship focuses on the consequences of such emotions or stimuli that increase them; however, there is limited work focusing on threat as a racialized emotion, or more broadly who is likely to experience heightened emotions when asked to think about historical racial violence that implicates their group. Using Group Position Theory and Identity Theory, I elevate work on racial threat as an emotion, and demonstrate how it is linked to white Americans’ group identification with their racial, national, and class identities. Then I compare this relationship to other commonly studied emotions—guilt and shame—to demonstrate threat’s unique relationship with these identities. Using survey data collected from a Survey Sampling International panel ( n = 869), I find that feelings of threat are maximized among white Americans who strongly identify with their racial and national identities. In contrast, guilt is heightened among whites who strongly identify with their racial identity, but weakly identify with their national identity, while shame has no significant relationship with these identities. Feelings of threat are also more likely in respondents who self-identify as members of the lower or working class (in comparison to the middle class). The results highlight one way that threat is a distinct emotional experience for white Americans when compared to other emotions. I conclude by discussing how understanding emotions as an outcome of white Americans’ self-perceptions of their identities as group members stands to advance the study of intergroup relations and racism in the United States.
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思考奴隶制时的种族化情绪:群体认同与美国白人的威胁、羞耻和内疚感之间的联系
当被要求思考美国土地上的奴隶制时,本文强调了美国白人群体认同与种族化情绪之间的关系。以前的学术研究关注的是这种情绪或刺激的后果;然而,关注威胁作为一种种族化情绪的工作是有限的,或者更广泛地说,当被要求思考涉及他们群体的历史种族暴力时,他们可能会经历高度的情绪。利用群体立场理论和身份理论,我将种族威胁作为一种情感提升,并展示了它是如何与美国白人的种族、民族和阶级身份的群体认同联系在一起的。然后,我将这种关系与其他常见的研究情绪——内疚和羞耻——进行比较,以证明威胁与这些身份之间的独特关系。使用从国际抽样调查小组(n = 869)收集的调查数据,我发现在强烈认同自己种族和民族身份的美国白人中,威胁感最大。相比之下,那些强烈认同自己的种族身份,但对自己的民族身份认同较弱的白人,内疚感更强,而羞耻感与这些身份认同没有显著关系。自我认同为下层或工人阶级的受访者(与中产阶级相比)也更有可能感到威胁。研究结果强调,与其他情绪相比,威胁对美国白人来说是一种独特的情感体验。最后,我讨论了将情感理解为美国白人对自己作为群体成员身份的自我认知的结果,将如何推动美国群体间关系和种族主义的研究。
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来源期刊
Social Currents
Social Currents SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Currents, the official journal of the Southern Sociological Society, is a broad-ranging social science journal that focuses on cutting-edge research from all methodological and theoretical orientations with implications for national and international sociological communities. The uniqueness of Social Currents lies in its format. The front end of every issue is devoted to short, theoretical, agenda-setting contributions and brief, empirical and policy-related pieces. The back end of every issue includes standard journal articles that cover topics within specific subfields of sociology, as well as across the social sciences more broadly.
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