Title of article
SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND SEXISM IN THE UNITED STATES AND TAIWAN
Author/Authors
I-CHING LEE، نويسنده , , Felicia Pratto، نويسنده , , MEI-CHIH LI، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
18
From page
595
To page
612
Abstract
This research examines the cultural origins of sexism and how it is enacted within cultures. The harmonious
tenor of Taiwanese collectivism and the competitive individualism of American culture are hypothesized
to afford benevolent sexism and hostile sexism, respectively. Whereas hostile sexism was expected
to affect Americans’ bias in favor of men more than benevolent sexism, benevolent sexism should affect
Taiwanese bias favoring men more than hostile sexism. Deferential family norms and support for hierarchical
intergroup relationships (social dominance orientation) were hypothesized to increase support of
sexism in both cultures. Two studies within each culture confirmed the aforementioned hypotheses. The
cultural roots of legitimizing ideologies and the cultural origins of different forms of sexism are discussed.
Keywords
cultural influence , benevolent sexism , social dominance orientation , deferential family norms , Hostile sexism
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708989
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