Title of article :
The life and death of creativity: The effects of mortality salience on self versus social-directed creative expression
Author/Authors :
Clay Routledge، نويسنده , , Jamie Arndt، نويسنده , , Matthew Vess and Kennon M. Sheldon، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Research in terror management theory suggests
that our connections to others function, in part, to provide
protection from the anxiety associated with the awareness
of inevitable death. The individuating nature of creative
expression can potentially undermine these connections,
making creativity particularly problematic when one is
dealing with mortality concerns. Consistent with this, a
number of findings have elucidated emotional consequences
associated with creativity when mortality concerns
are active. However, to date, research has not focused on
how mortality awareness may impact levels of creativity.
The present study assessed the hypothesis that mortality
concerns will inhibit creative behavior that threatens social
connections but will not undermine and may even facilitate
creative behavior that bolsters social connections.
The results showed that amplified concerns about mortality
decreased creativity when the act was self-directed but not
when it was community-directed. Theoretical implications
and future directions are discussed.
Keywords :
Terror management Creativity Social connectedness Individuation
Journal title :
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Journal title :
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION