Publication | Open Access
Withdraw or affiliate? The role of humiliation during initiation rituals
43
Citations
23
References
2015
Year
CultureBehavioral SciencesPerformance StudiesSocial IdentityProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorSocial PsychologyOther NovicesEducationSocial SciencesApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryVictimisationInitiation RitualsAggressionPsychologyFellow Novices
Initiation rituals can take different forms and empirical evidence is inconsistent as to whether these rituals promote affiliation among novices. We argue that experienced humiliation during initiations leads to less affiliation among novices, in particular when one is initiated as sole group member rather than as part of the group. We examined this hypothesis in three studies, using different paradigms. In Study 1 (N = 123), perceived severity of an initiation in the past was associated with lower affiliation with other novices; this relationship was mediated by experienced humiliation. Study 2 (N = 64) showed that public derogation in the lab led to more humiliation when participants were the only victim than when they were derogated as a group. Study 3 (N = 248), a vignette study, showed that a similar effect of social context was mediated by expected support from other novices. We conclude that severe initiations may, due to experienced humiliation, result in less rather than more affiliation with fellow novices.
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