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性别歧视与权力的相互依赖关系:男性的敌意性别歧视、对低权力的偏见认知与关系侵犯。

An interdependence account of sexism and power: Men's hostile sexism, biased perceptions of low power, and relationship aggression.

机构信息

School of Psychology, University of Auckland.

Department of Psychology, Florida State University.

出版信息

J Pers Soc Psychol. 2019 Aug;117(2):338-363. doi: 10.1037/pspi0000167. Epub 2018 Nov 26.

Abstract

Protecting men's power is fundamental to understanding the origin, expression, and targets of hostile sexism, yet no prior theoretical or empirical work has specified how hostile sexism is related to experiences of power. In the current studies, we propose that the interdependence inherent in heterosexual relationships will lead men who more strongly endorse hostile sexism to perceive they have lower power in their relationship, and that these perceptions will be biased. We also predicted that lower perceptions of power would in turn promote aggression toward intimate partners. Across 4 studies, men who more strongly endorsed hostile sexism perceived lower power in their relationships. Comparisons across partners supported that these lower perceptions of power were biased; men who more strongly endorsed hostile sexism underestimated the power they had compared with their partners' reports of that power (Studies 1 and 2). These lower perceptions of power, in turn, predicted greater aggression toward female partners during couples' daily interactions (Study 1), observed during couples' video-recorded conflict discussions (Study 2), and reported over the last year (Studies 3 and 4). Moreover, the associations between hostile sexism, power, and aggression were specific to men perceiving lower relationship power rather than desiring greater power in their relationships (Studies 3 and 4), and they were not the result of generally being more dominant and aggressive (Studies 3 and 4), or more negative relationship evaluations from either partner (Studies 1-4). The findings demonstrate the importance of an interdependence perspective in understanding the experiences, aggressive expressions, and broader consequences associated with hostile sexism. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

摘要

保护男性权力对于理解敌意性别歧视的起源、表现和目标至关重要,但之前的理论或实证工作都没有具体说明敌意性别歧视与权力体验之间的关系。在当前的研究中,我们提出,异性恋关系中固有的相互依存性将导致那些更强烈支持敌意性别歧视的男性认为他们在关系中权力较低,并且这些看法会存在偏差。我们还预测,较低的权力感反过来会促进对亲密伴侣的攻击。在 4 项研究中,那些更强烈支持敌意性别歧视的男性认为他们在关系中的权力较低。对伴侣的比较支持了这些较低的权力感存在偏差;那些更强烈支持敌意性别歧视的男性低估了他们相对于伴侣对权力的报告所拥有的权力(研究 1 和 2)。反过来,这些较低的权力感又预测了在夫妻日常互动中(研究 1)、在夫妻的视频记录冲突讨论中(研究 2)以及在过去一年中的更大的对女性伴侣的攻击(研究 3 和 4)。此外,敌意性别歧视、权力和攻击之间的关联是针对男性感知到的较低关系权力,而不是他们对关系中的更大权力的渴望(研究 3 和 4),而且这些关联不是源于更普遍的支配和攻击性(研究 3 和 4),也不是源于任何一方对关系的更负面评价(研究 1-4)。这些发现表明,相互依存的观点在理解与敌意性别歧视相关的经验、攻击性表达和更广泛的后果方面具有重要意义。(APA,2019)

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