Cameron J E, Lalonde R N
York University, Canada.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2001 Mar;40(Pt 1):59-77. doi: 10.1348/014466601164696.
The nature of women's and men's gender-derived social identification was examined with a focus on the relationships between aspects of identity and gender-related ideology. Measures of social identification, sex-role ideology, and the perception of women's collective disadvantage were completed by 171 women and 91 men who categorized themselves as either traditional, non-traditional or feminist. Factor analysis provided support for a multidimensional conception of gender-derived social identification, with viable subscales reflecting in-group ties, cognitive centrality, and in-group affect. For self-identified non-traditional and feminist women, the cognitive centrality of gender was greater, and more consistently related to gender-related ideology, than for traditional women. Traditional men reported stronger in-group ties and more positive gender-linked affect than did non-traditional men, but men's levels of identification were generally weakly related to gender-related ideology. The utility of considering both multiple dimensions and ideological correlates of group identification is discussed with reference to social identity theory.
本研究聚焦于身份认同各方面与性别相关意识形态之间的关系,对基于性别的女性和男性社会认同的本质进行了考察。171名女性和91名男性完成了社会认同、性别角色意识形态以及对女性集体劣势认知的测量,这些参与者将自己归类为传统型、非传统型或女权主义者。因子分析为基于性别的社会认同的多维概念提供了支持,其中可行的子量表反映了群体内联系、认知核心地位和群体内情感。对于自我认同为非传统型和女权主义的女性来说,性别在认知上的核心地位比传统女性更强,且与性别相关意识形态的联系更一致。与非传统男性相比,传统男性报告出更强的群体内联系以及与性别相关的更积极情感,但男性的认同水平总体上与性别相关意识形态的联系较弱。本文参照社会认同理论,讨论了考虑群体认同的多个维度及其意识形态关联的效用。