Reed College, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2010 Sep;49(Pt 3):471-88. doi: 10.1348/014466609X468411. Epub 2009 Sep 28.
Despite the fact that disabled people comprise a heterogeneous social group, cross-impairment cultural stereotypes reflect a consistent set of beliefs used to characterize this population as dependent, incompetent, and asexual. Using a free-response methodology, stereotypical beliefs about disabled men (DM) and women (DW) were contrasted against the stereotypes of their non-disabled counterparts illustrating the dimensions considered most diagnostic of each group. Results revealed that both disabled and non-disabled participants expressed consensus about the contents of group stereotypes that exaggerate traditional gender role expectations of the non-disabled while minimizing perceived differences between DM and DW. Implications for the field of stereotyping and prejudice, and the individual and system justifying functions of cultural stereotypes are discussed.
尽管残疾人群体具有异质性,但跨障碍文化刻板印象反映了一组一致的信念,用于描述这一人群为依赖、无能和无性的。本研究使用自由反应方法,对比了残疾男性(DM)和残疾女性(DW)的刻板印象与他们非残疾对应者的刻板印象,说明了被认为对每个群体最具诊断意义的维度。结果表明,残疾人和非残疾人参与者都对夸大非残疾人传统性别角色期望、同时最小化 DM 和 DW 之间感知差异的群体刻板印象内容表示一致。讨论了刻板印象和偏见领域以及文化刻板印象的个体和制度合理化功能的含义。