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Beat them or ban them: The characteristics and social functions of anger and contempt.
705
Citations
48
References
2007
Year
Social PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceEmpathyMedia ViolenceSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseContempt ReactionsInterpersonal AttractionEmotion RegulationSocial ConflictPersonal RelationshipContempt ResponsesHate SpeechSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesAdaptive EmotionApplied Social PsychologyPsychological ViolenceSocial BehaviorDistinctive CharacteristicsEmotionSocial FunctionsAggressionInjustice
This article reports 3 studies in which the authors examined (a) the distinctive characteristics of anger and contempt responses and (b) the interpersonal causes and effects of both emotions. In the 1st study, the authors examined the distinction between the 2 emotions; in the 2nd study, the authors tested whether contempt could be predicted from previous anger incidents with the same person; and in the 3rd study, the authors examined the effects of type of relationship on anger and contempt reactions. The results of the 3 studies show that anger and contempt often occur together but that there are clear distinctions between the 2 emotions: Anger is characterized more by short-term attack responses but long-term reconciliation, whereas contempt is characterized by rejection and social exclusion of the other person, both in the short-term and in the long-term. The authors also found that contempt may develop out of previously experienced anger and that a lack of intimacy with and perceived control over the behavior of the other person, as well as negative dispositional attributions about the other person, predicted the emergence of contempt.
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