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Toplumsal Cinsiyet Kalıpyargılarıyla Uyumsuz Kadınlara Karşı Olumsuz Tutumların Nedenlerinin Sosyal Kimlik Kuramı Kapsamında İncelenmesi

Year 2023, Volume: 15 Issue: 2, 296 - 306, 30.06.2023
https://doi.org/10.18863/pgy.1146546

Abstract

Ana akım sosyal psikolojide kabul edilen temel toplumsal cinsiyet kalıpyargıları, kadınları düşük yetkinlikle ve yüksek sevecenlikle tanımlayan kalıpyargıların yanı sıra erkeklerin düşük sevecenlikle ve yüksek yetkinlikle tanımlandığı kalıpyargılardır. Cinsiyet kalıpyargılarıyla uyumsuz kadınlar genel bir örüntü olarak olumsuz tutumlara maruz kalmaktadır. Olumsuz tutumlara maruz kalan grupların üyelerinin psikolojik iyi oluş halleri negatif yönde etkilenmektedir. Sosyal grupların üyelerinin düşük sosyal statülerinin devam etmesinde bu grupların üyelerine yönelik kalıpyargıların ve olumsuz tutumların etkisi söz konusudur. Cinsiyet kalıpyargılarıyla uyumsuz kadınlara karşı olumsuz tutumların nedenlerinin açıklanması, anaakım sosyal psikolojide ihmal edilmiş bir konudur. Kadınların erkeklere kıyasla dezavantajlı statüye sahip olduğu süregelen toplumsal cinsiyet sisteminde değişimin sağlanması, kalıpyargılarla uyumsuz kadınlara yönelik olumsuz tutumların nedenlerinin anlaşılmasını gerektirmektedir. Bu çalışmada, Sosyal Kimlik Kuramının önerilerinden ve çalışma bulgularından yola çıkılarak kalıpyargılarla uyumsuz kadınlara karşı olumsuz tutumlara ilişkin açıklamalar sunulmuştur. Çoğu erkek sosyal kimliğini yetkinlik gibi statüyle ilintili özellikler üzerinden tanımlamaktadır. Erkeklerin sosyal kimliğinin yetkinliği yüksek olan kadınlar tarafından tehdit edilmesi nedeniyle bu kadınlara karşı erkeklerin çoğu tarafından olumsuz tutumların açığa çıkarıldığı sonucuna kuramsal önerilerden yola çıkılarak ulaşılmaktadır. Kadınların cinsiyet kalıpyargılarıyla uyumsuz hemcinslerine karşı olumsuz tutumlarını açıklamada kuramın önerdiği kimlik yönetim stratejilerine başvurmak gerekmektedir. Kuramsal öneriler ve alanyazındaki çalışma bulguları doğrultusunda, bireysel hareketlilik ve sosyal yaratıcılık stratejilerinin benimsenmesinin kalıpyargılarla uyumsuz hemcinslere karşı olumsuz tutumları açığa çıkardığı sonucuna ulaşılmaktadır. Sosyal rekabet stratejisini benimseyen kadınların kalıpyargılarla uyumsuz hemcinslerine karşı olumlu tutumlar benimsemesi beklenilmekle birlikte, ilgili stratejinin benimsenme düzeyi düşüktür. Kuram kapsamındaki öneriler ve çalışma bulguları bir araya getirildiğinde, cinsiyet kalıpyargılarıyla uyumsuz kadınlara karşı toplum genelinde sürdürülen olumsuz tutumların nedenlerinin anlaşılması mümkün olmaktadır.

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Investigation of the Causes of Negative Attitudes towards Women Incompatible with Gender Stereotypes within the Context of Social Identity Theory

Year 2023, Volume: 15 Issue: 2, 296 - 306, 30.06.2023
https://doi.org/10.18863/pgy.1146546

Abstract

The primary gender stereotypes accepted in mainstream social psychology describe women as low in competence and high in warmth, men as having low warmth and high competence. Women who are incompatible with stereotypes are exposed to negative attitudes. Exposure to negative attitudes damages the psychological well-being of these group members. Stereotypes and negative attitudes towards members of social groups contribute to the persistence of their low status. Explaining the causes of gender stereotypes and negative attitudes towards women incompatible with stereotypes is an overlooked topic in mainstream social psychology. In order to change the ongoing gender system, where women have a disadvantageous status compared to men, it is necessary to understand the reasons for negative attitudes towards women who are incompatible with stereotypes. Based on the suggestions and findings of Social Identity Theory, explanations about negative attitudes towards women who are incompatible with gender stereotypes are presented in this study. It is concluded that most men reveal negative attitudes towards these women because women with high competency threaten men who can affirm their social identity through competency. Most men define their social identity through status-related traits such as competency. Due to the threat to men's social identity by women with high competence, it is concluded that negative attitudes towards these women are revealed by most of the men, based on theoretical suggestions. It is necessary to understand the identity management strategies to explain women's negative attitudes towards their fellows who are incompatible with stereotypes. According to the theoretical suggestions and related studies, it is concluded that the adoption of individual mobility and social creativity strategies reveal negative attitudes toward fellows who are incompatible with stereotypes. Although it is expected that women who adopt the social competition strategy have positive attitudes towards their fellows who are inconsistent with gender stereotypes, the level of adoption of this strategy is low. When theoretical suggestions and study findings are brought together, it is possible to understand the reasons for the negative attitudes towards women who are incompatible with gender stereotypes.

References

  • Acemoglu D, Autor D, Lyle, D (2004). Midcentury women, war, and wages: The effect of female labor supply on the wage structure at midcentury. J Polit Econ, 112:497–551.
  • Akfirat S, Polat FC, Yetim U (2016). How the poor deal with their own poverty: A social psychological analysis from the social identity perspective. Soc Indic Res, 127:413-433.
  • Aktan T, Bilim G (2016). Kadınlara yönelik kalıpyargıların içerikleri: Kalıpyargı İçeriği Modeli çerçevesinde bir inceleme. Nesne Psikoloji Dergisi, 4:147-182.
  • Augoustinos M, Innes JM (1990). Towards an integration of social representations and social schema theory, Br J Soc Psychol, 29:213-231.
  • Augoustinos M, Walker I, Donaghue N (2014). Social Cognition: An Integrated Introduction, 3rd ed. California, Sage Publishing.
  • Auyeung B, Baron-Cohen S, Ashwin E, Knickmeyer R, Taylor K, Hackett G (2009). Fetal testosterone and autistic traits. Br J Soc Psychol, 100:1–22.
  • Bettencourt B, Charlton K, Dorr N, Hume DL (2001). Status differences and in-group bias: a meta-analytic examination of the effects of status stability, status legitimacy, and group permeability. Psychol Bull, 127:520-542.
  • Blackwood LM, Louis WR (2012). If it matters for the group then it matters to me: Collective action outcomes for seasoned activists. Br J Soc Psychol, 51:72-92.
  • Breinlinger S, Kelly C (1994). Women's responses to status inequality: A test of social identity theory. Psychol Women Q, 18:1-16.
  • Brescoll VL, Uhlmann EL (2005). Attitudes toward traditional and nontraditional parents. Psychol Women Q, 29:436–445.
  • Brizendline L (2006). The Female Brain, 1st ed. New York, Broadway Books.
  • Cambon L, Yzerbyt V, Yakimova S (2015). Compensation in intergroup relations: An investigation of its structural and strategic foundations. Br J Soc Psychol, 54: 140-158.
  • Connell RW (2009). Toplumsal Cinsiyet ve İktidar (Çeviri Ed. C Soydemir). İstanbul, Ayrıntı Yayınları.
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  • Cuddy AJC, Fiske ST, Kwan VSY, Glick P, Demoulin S, Leyens JP et al. (2009). Stereotype content model across cultures: Towards universal similarities and some differences. Br J Soc Psychol, 48:1–33.
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  • Derks B, Van Laar C, Ellemers N, De Groot K (2011b). Gender-bias primes elicit queen-bee responses among senior policewomen. Psychological Science, 22:1243-1249.
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  • Diamond MC (1991). Hormonal effects on the development or cerebral lateralization. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 16:121-129.
  • Doosje B, Ellemers N, Spears R (1995). Perceived intragroup variability as a function of group status and identification. J Exp Soc Psychol, 31:410-436.
  • Dovidio JF, Glick P, Rudman LA (2005). On the Nature of Prejudice: Fifty Years after Allport. On the Nature of Prejudice: Fifty Years after Allport, 1st ed. USA, Blackwell Publishing.
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  • Eckes T, Trautner HM (2000). The Developmental Social Psychology of Gender, 1st ed. England, Psychology Press.
  • Eidelman S, Biernat M (2003). Derogating black sheep: Individual or group protection?. J Exp Soc Psychol, 39:602-609.
  • Ellemers N, Bos AE (1998). Social Identity, Relative Deprivation, and Coping with the Threat of Position Loss: A Field Study among Native Shopkeepers in Amsterdam. J Appl Soc Psychol, 28:1987-2006.
  • Ellemers N, Spears R, Doosje B (2002). Self and social identity. Annu Rev Psychol, 53:161-186.
  • Ellemers N, Van den Heuvel H, De Gilder D, Maass A, Bonvini A (2004). The underrepresentation of women in science: Differential commitment or the queen bee syndrome?. Br J Soc Psychol, 43:315-338.
  • Ellemers N, Van Rijswijk W (1997). Identity needs versus social opportunities: The use of group-level and individual-level identity management strategies. Soc Psychol Q, 60: 52-65.
  • Ellis L J, Bentler PM (1973). Traditional sex-determined role standards and sex stereotypes. J Pers Soc Psychol, 25:28-34.
  • Finegan JAK, Niccols GA, Sitarenios G (1992). Relations between prenatal testosterone levels and cognitive abilities at 4 years. Dev Psychol, 28:1075-1089.
  • Fiske ST, Cuddy AJC, Glick P, Xu J (2002). A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: Competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition. J Pers Soc Psychol, 82:878–902.
  • Fiske ST, Durante F (2016). Stereotype content across cultures: Variations on a few themes. In Handbook of Advances in Culture and Psychology, 1st ed. (Eds MJ Gelfand, CY Chiu, YY Hong):209-258. United Kingdom, Oxford University Press.
  • Fiske ST, Xu J, Cuddy AC, Glick P (1999). (Dis)respecting versus (Dis)liking: Status and interdependence predict ambivalent stereotypes of competence and warmth. J Soc Issues, 55:473–489.
  • Geschwind N, Behan P (1982). Left-handedness: association with immune disease, migraine, and developmental learning disorder. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 79:5097–5100.
  • Gilmore JH, Lin W, Prastawa MW, Looney CB, Vetsa YSK, Knickmeyer RC, et al. (2007). Regional Gray Matter Growth, Sexual Dimorphism, and Cerebral Asymmetry in the Neonatal Brain. J Neurosci, 27:1255–1260.
  • Guimond S, Chatard A, Martinot D, Crisp RJ, Redersdorff S (2006). Social comparison, self-stereotyping, and gender differences in self-construals. J Pers Soc Psychol, 90:221–242.
  • Guimond S, Dif S, Aupy A (2002). Social identity, relative group status and intergroup attitudes: When favourable outcomes change intergroup relations… for the worse. Eur J Soc Psychol, 32:739-760.
  • Heilman ME, Okimoto TG (2007). Why are women penalized for success at male tasks?: The implied communality deficit. J Appl Soc Psychol, 92:81–92.
  • Helgeson V (2012). The Psychology of Gender. 4th ed. England, Psychology Press.
  • Hines M (2006). Prenatal testosterone and gender-related behaviour. Eur J Endocrinol, 155:115-121.
  • Iacoviello V, Lorenzi-Cioldi F, Chipeaux M (2019). The identification-similarity relationship as a function of ingroup status: A social identity perspective. Self Identity, 18:685-708.
  • Jackson LA, Sullivan LA, Harnish R, Hodge CN (1996). Achieving positive social identity: Social mobility, social creativity, and permeability of group boundaries. J Pers Soc Psychol, 70:241-254.
  • Kervyn N, Yzerbyt V, Judd CM (2010). Compensation between warmth and competence: Antecedents and consequences of a negative relation between the two fundamental dimensions of social perception. Eur Rev Soc Psychol, 21:155-187.
  • Klandermans B (1984). Mobilization and participation: Social-psychological expansisons of resource mobilization theory. Am Sociol Rev, 49:583-600.
  • Lewis AC, Sherman SJ (2010). Perceived entitativity and the black-sheep effect: When will we denigrate negative ingroup members?. J. Soc. Psychol, 150:211-225.
  • Macunovich DJ (1996). Relative income and price of time: Exploring their effects on US fertility and female labor force participation. Popul Dev Rev, 22:223-257.
  • Marques JM, Yzerbyt VY (1988). The black sheep effect: Judgmental extremity towards ingroup members in inter‐and intra‐group situations. Eur J Soc Psychol, 18:287–292.
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Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Psychology
Journal Section Review
Authors

Ezgi Kaşdarma 0000-0002-1124-4380

Early Pub Date June 30, 2023
Publication Date June 30, 2023
Acceptance Date October 3, 2022
Published in Issue Year 2023 Volume: 15 Issue: 2

Cite

AMA Kaşdarma E. Investigation of the Causes of Negative Attitudes towards Women Incompatible with Gender Stereotypes within the Context of Social Identity Theory. Psikiyatride Güncel Yaklaşımlar - Current Approaches in Psychiatry. June 2023;15(2):296-306. doi:10.18863/pgy.1146546

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