On the Nature of Prejudice: Fifty Years after Allport By
2005 | 469 Pages | ISBN: 1405127503 | PDF | 3 MB
2005 | 469 Pages | ISBN: 1405127503 | PDF | 3 MB
On the Nature of Prejudice commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Gordon Allport's classic work on prejudice and discrimination by examining the current state of knowledge in the field. A distinguished collection of international scholars considers Allport's impact on the field, reviews recent developments, and identifies promising directions for future investigation. Organized around Allport's central themes, this book provides a state-of-the-art, comprehensive view of where the field has been, where it is now, and where it is going. Content: Chapter 1 Introduction: Reflecting on The Nature of Prejudice: Fifty Years after Allport (pages 1–15): John F. Dovidio, Peter Glick and Laurie A. RudmanChapter 2 What is the Problem? Prejudice as an Attitude?in?Context (pages 17–35): Alice H. Eagly and Amanda B. DiekmanChapter 3 Social Cognition and the Normality of Prejudgment (pages 36–53): Susan T. FiskeChapter 4 Ingroup Affiliations and Prejudice (pages 54–70): Rupert Brown and Hanna ZagefkaChapter 5 Categorization, Recategorization, and Intergroup Bias (pages 71–88): Samuel L. Gaertner and John F. DovidioChapter 6 Rejection or Inclusion of Outgroups? (pages 89–105): Mary R. JackmanChapter 7 Rejection of Women? Beyond Prejudice as Antipathy (pages 106–120): Laurie A. RudmanChapter 8 Group Differences and Stereotype Accuracy (pages 121–138): Charles M. Judd and Bernadette ParkChapter 9 The Psychological Impact of Prejudice (pages 139–154): Brenda Major and S. Brooke VickChapter 10 Mechanisms for Coping with Victimization: Self?Protection Plus Self?Enhancement (pages 155–171): James M. JonesChapter 11 Cognitive Process: Reality Constraints and IntegrityConcerns in Social Perception (pages 173–191): Vincent Yzerbyt and Olivier CorneilleChapter 12 Linguistic Factors: Antilocutions, Ethnonyms, Ethnophaulisms, and Other Varieties of Hate Speech (pages 192–207): Brian Mullen and Tirza LeaderChapter 13 Stereotypes in Our Culture (pages 208–224): John T. Jost and David L. HamiltonChapter 14 Instrumental Relations Among Groups: Group Competition, Conflict, and Prejudice (pages 225–243): Victoria M. Esses, Lynne M. Jackson, John F. Dovidio and Gordon HodsonChapter 15 Choice of Scapegoats (pages 244–261): Peter GlickChapter 16 Allport's Intergroup Contact Hypothesis: Its History and Influence (pages 262–277): Thomas F. Pettigrew and Linda R. TroppChapter 17 Intergroup Contact: When Does it Work, and Why? (pages 278–292): Jared B. Kenworthy, Rhiannon N. Turner, Miles Hewstone and Alberto VociChapter 18 Conformity and Prejudice (pages 293–309): Christian S. Crandall and Charles StangorChapter 19 The Devlopment of Prejudice in Childhood and Adolescence (pages 310–326): Frances E. AboudChapter 20 Breaking the Prejudice Habit: Allport's “Inner Conflict” Revisited (pages 327–342): Patricia G. DevineChapter 21 Inner Conflict in the Political Psychology of Racism (pages 343–358): David O. SearsChapter 22 Aggression, Hatred, and Other Emotions (pages 359–376): Eliot R. Smith and Diane M. MackieChapter 23 Allport's “Living Inkblots”: The Role of Defensive Projection in Stereotyping and Prejudice (pages 377–392): Leonard S. Newman and Tracy L. CaldwellChapter 24 Personality and Prejudice (pages 393–412): John DuckittChapter 25 Religion and Prejudice (pages 413–427): C. Daniel Batson and E. L. StocksChapter 26 Intergroup Relations Program Evaluation (pages 429–446): Walter G. Stephan and Cookie White Stephan