Publication | Closed Access
Gender and Culture Differences in Emotion.
510
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Women EmpowermentGendered PerceptionEducationCultural FactorSocial SciencesPsychologyPowerful EmotionsGender IdentityGender StudiesCulture DifferencesEmotional ExpressionGendered ContextCultureWomen's EmpowermentCross-cultural DatasetSociologyCross-cultural PerspectiveGender Empowerment MeasureEmotionCultural Psychology
In this article, the authors report a secondary analysis on a cross-cultural dataset on gender differences in 6 emotions, collected in 37 countries all over the world. The aim was to test the universality of the gender-specific pattern found in studies with Western respondents, namely that men report more powerful emotions (e.g., anger), whereas women report more powerless emotions (e.g., sadness, fear). The authors expected the strength of these gender differences to depend on women's status and roles in their respective countries, as operationalized by the Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM; United Nations Development Programme Human Development Report 2002). Overall, the gender-specific pattern of women reporting to experience and express more powerless emotions and men more powerful emotions was replicated, and only some interactions with the GEM were found.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1