Search results for "Anti-miscegenation attitudes"

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Mixing against culture vs mixing against nature: ontologization of prohibited interethnic relationships.

2009

In this paper, we develop the theory of ontologization: Social representations that prevent members of minority and majority groups who are living in contact with each other to mingle. The process of ontologization consists of separating some humans from their own species, and anchoring them in another environment, that of an animal, for example. We propose that underlying the famous slogan "equal but separate" is the social representation of interracial mixing as a "counter-nature" phenomenon. It is predicted that a sexual relationship between people of different "races" leads to a greater degree of ontologization, and, as such, this miscegenation will be explained in terms of biologistic …

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectRacial purityThinkingInterpersonal relationshipJudgmentYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)SloganPhenomenonSocial representationEthnicityHumansInterpersonal RelationsSociologyInterracial marriagesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonStereotypingCultural CharacteristicsSocial IdentificationGroup ContactGender IdentityGender studiesAnti-miscegenation attitudesGeneral MedicineRace RelationsExtramarital RelationsExtramarital RelationsOntologisazionInstinctAnti-miscegenation attitudes; Group Contact; Interracial marriages; Ontologisazion; Racial purityAttitudePsychological DistanceAtavismConstrual level theoryFemaleSocial psychologyPrejudiceInternational journal of psychology : Journal international de psychologie
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