Publication | Closed Access
Choice as an act of meaning: The case of social class.
526
Citations
86
References
2007
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheorySocial TheorySocial PsychologyConsumer StudyConsumer ResearchEducationConsumer AttitudeSocial InfluenceSocial CategorizationSocial SciencesPsychologyCollective ChoiceMd ContextsConsumer BehaviorSocial ActionSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesSocial ClassApplied Social PsychologySocial CognitionBehavioral EconomicsSocial BiasSocial BehaviorSociologyNormative GuidelinesClass AnalysisPersuasionSocial Justice
Social class is one important source of models of agency--normative guidelines for how to be a "good" person. Using choice as a prototypically agentic action, 5 studies test the hypotheses that models of agency prevalent in working-class (WK) contexts reflect a normative preference for similarity to others, whereas models prevalent in middle-class (MD) contexts reflect a preference for difference from others. Focusing on participants' choices, Studies 1 and 2 showed that participants from WK relative to MD contexts more often chose pens that appeared similar to, rather than different from, other pens in the choice set, and more often chose the same images as another participant. Examining participants' responses to others' choices, Studies 3 and 4 demonstrated that participants from WK relative to MD contexts liked their chosen pens more when a confederate chose similarly and responded more positively when a friend chose the same car in a hypothetical scenario. Finally, Study 5 found that car advertisements targeting WK rather than MD consumers more often emphasized connection to, rather than differentiation from, others, suggesting that models of agency are reflected in pervasive cultural products.
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