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Reducing political polarization through narrative writing
34
Citations
46
References
2020
Year
Social PsychologyPublic OpinionSocial InfluencePolitical PolarizationRhetoricCommunicationSocial SciencesNarrative RepresentationIntergroup RelationDiscourse AnalysisPolitical CommunicationComplementary Writing ActivitiesSocial IdentityNarrative ExtractionGroup InteractionApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryCollective SelfInterpersonal CommunicationAffective PolarizationArtsPolitical Science
This study proposes two complementary writing activities designed to reduce affective polarization and malevolent outgroup attributions. The strategies draw on narrative theorizing and intergroup contact theory. Our intervention is low cost and can be effectively administrated in educational settings to combat the deleterious effects of political polarization. In this four-group between-subjects randomized experiment (n = 179), we found that a first-person perspective taking narrative writing exercise and a common ingroup cooperative narrative writing exercise both reduced political polarization and, thereby, reduced malevolent outgroup attributions. Our results revealed that both activities improved affect toward and perceived similarity with a noxious member of the political outgroup and, as a result, reduced affective political polarization. We discuss the theoretical and applied implications of our findings and encourage educators to adopt activities modeled after our interventions in their classrooms.
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