Publication | Closed Access
Anger, Blame, and Dimensions of Perceived Norm Violations: Culture, Gender, and Relationships
80
Citations
17
References
2004
Year
Psychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyEducationCultural FactorPsychologySocial SciencesGender StudiesPerceived Norm ViolationsHong KongSocial ConflictSocial IdentityApplied Social PsychologyMoral PsychologyCultureSocial BiasSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsSocial NormNorm ViolationsEmotionAggressionCultural Psychology
From a social cognitive perspective on anger, we attempted to examine the structure of perceived norm violations and their relationships with anger. We asked 884 university students from 4 countries (United States, Germany, Japan, and Hong Kong) to rate their experiences of being harmed in terms of norm violations, angry feelings, blame, and relationship with the harm doers. We found 2 culturally common dimensions in perceived norm violations (informal interpersonal norms and formal societal norms), and these dimensions substantially increased both angry feelings and blame in almost all cultural groups. The violation of interpersonal norms generally evoked anger more frequently than that of societal norms, but there were interactions between culture and relationship closeness and between gender and relationship closeness.
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