Parrott Dominic J, Peterson John L
Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia 30302-5010, USA.
Aggress Behav. 2008 May-Jun;34(3):306-18. doi: 10.1002/ab.20239.
The aim of this study was to examine the role of anger in response to gay men within three theoretical models of antigay aggression. Participants were 135 exclusively heterosexual men who completed a structured interview designed to assess sexual prejudice, anger in response to a vignette depicting a nonerotic male-male intimate relationship (i.e. partners saying "I love you", holding hands, kissing), and past perpetration of antigay aggression. Among identified antigay assailants, motivations for one earlier assault (i.e. sexual prejudice, peer dynamics, thrill seeking) were also assessed. Results indicated that anger fully mediated the relationship between sexual prejudice and antigay aggression, partially mediated the effect of peer dynamics on antigay aggression, and did not account for the relationship between thrill seeking and antigay aggression. These findings indicate that anger in response to gay men facilitates antigay aggression among some, but not all, antigay perpetrators.
本研究的目的是在三种反同性恋攻击的理论模型中检验愤怒在对男同性恋者反应中的作用。参与者为135名完全异性恋男性,他们完成了一项结构化访谈,旨在评估性偏见、对描绘非色情男男亲密关系(即伴侣说“我爱你”、牵手、亲吻)的 vignette 的愤怒反应,以及过去实施反同性恋攻击的情况。在已确定的反同性恋攻击者中,还评估了一次早期攻击的动机(即性偏见、同伴动态、寻求刺激)。结果表明,愤怒完全中介了性偏见与反同性恋攻击之间的关系,部分中介了同伴动态对反同性恋攻击的影响,并且不能解释寻求刺激与反同性恋攻击之间的关系。这些发现表明,对男同性恋者的愤怒在一些但不是所有反同性恋犯罪者中促进了反同性恋攻击。