Collective Guilt: International PerspectivesNyla B. Branscombe, Nyla R. Branscombe, Bertjan Doosje Cambridge University Press, 6 сент. 2004 г. - Всего страниц: 339 Emotion can result from interpreting group actions as reflecting on the self due to an association between the two. This volume considers the nature of collective guilt, the antecedent conditions necessary for it to be experienced, how it can be measured, as well as how collective guilt differs from other group based emotions. Research from Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, Northern Ireland, and the USA addresses critical questions concerning the who, when, and why of the experience of collective guilt. The political implications of collective guilt and forgiveness for the past are considered, and how those might depend on the national context. How collective guilt can be harnessed and used to create a more peaceful future for groups with a history of violence between then is emphasized. |
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Содержание
International Perspectives on the Experience of Collective | 3 |
What It Is and What | 16 |
Predicting Support | 56 |
Gender Inequality and the Intensity of Mens Collective Guilt | 75 |
Consequences of National Ingroup Identification | 95 |
Exonerating Cognitions Group Identification and Personal | 130 |
Implications | 148 |
Collective Guilt National Identity and Political Processes | 169 |
Social | 193 |
Theoretical | 216 |
vii | 257 |
The Role of Guilt and Other | 262 |
Importance of Social Categorization for Forgiveness | 284 |
Individual versus Group Rights in Western Philosophy | 309 |
335 | |
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Collective Guilt: International Perspectives Nyla R. Branscombe,Bertjan Doosje Недоступно для просмотра - 2004 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
accept acknowledgment actions acts apology argued argument asked aspects assignment associated attitudes Australians behavior belief Branscombe categorization Chapter collective guilt committed compensation concerning condition consequences consider constructed context contrast correlated defensive disadvantaged group Doosje Dutch effects emotional empathy et al example expected experience expression extent feelings of collective findings focus forgiveness German group members group-based harm higher identifiers Holocaust human identification immoral important increased indicated Indigenous individual inequality ingroup injustices intergroup Israelis issue Jews Journal less lower means measure moral motivation negative Northern Ireland one's outgroup Palestinians participants past perceived percent perpetrator perspective perspective-taking political positive practices predicted present Press racial reactions reconciliation relations relationship reparations responsibility result role shame showed social identity Social Psychology specific suffering suggest theory tion trust University values victims volume White York