Different pasts for different political folk: Political orientation predicts collective nostalgia content
Different pasts for different political folk: Political orientation predicts collective nostalgia content
Collective nostalgia is a bittersweet emotion that reflects sentimental longing for valued aspects of the past of one’s group. Given that conservatism is typically associated with a general desire to preserve the societal status quo or return society to its traditional way of being, nostalgia has been theorized to be characteristic of those on the political right (i.e., conservatives). In the current work, we proposed and tested the hypothesis that collective nostalgia is experienced by both conservatives and liberals, but the content of their nostalgizing differs. Across three studies in three socio-political contexts—USA (Study 1, MTurk, N = 352), Canada (Study 2, student sample, N = 154), and England (Study 3, online panel, N = 2,345)—we found that both conservatives and liberals experienced collective nostalgia for a more homogenous and open society. However, conservatives experienced more homogeneity-focused collective nostalgia, whereas liberals experienced more openness-focused collective nostalgia. Replicating previous findings, homogeneity-focused nostalgia emerged as a positive, whereas openness-focused nostalgia emerged as a negative, predictor of intergroup prejudice. The results have both theoretical and practical significance for understanding political attitudes and behaviors. To the point, variance in the conservative and liberal political agendas is, in part, a function of a difference in their respective predisposition to nostalgize about and thus desire the return of a particular aspect of the in-group’s past.
Stefaniak, Anna
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Wohl, Michael Jeremy Adam
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Sedikides, Constantine
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Smeekes, Anouk
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Wildschut, Tim
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29 March 2021
Stefaniak, Anna
f13fb0f4-9a2a-45ec-a912-7bf852170f34
Wohl, Michael Jeremy Adam
6b8a5614-46f5-4c62-887c-b45b351c2926
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Smeekes, Anouk
5486253e-9d37-485d-af43-a51a5cb490c3
Wildschut, Tim
4452a61d-1649-4c4a-bb1d-154ec446ff81
Stefaniak, Anna, Wohl, Michael Jeremy Adam, Sedikides, Constantine, Smeekes, Anouk and Wildschut, Tim
(2021)
Different pasts for different political folk: Political orientation predicts collective nostalgia content.
Frontiers in Political Science, 3, [633688].
(doi:10.3389/fpos.2021.633688).
Abstract
Collective nostalgia is a bittersweet emotion that reflects sentimental longing for valued aspects of the past of one’s group. Given that conservatism is typically associated with a general desire to preserve the societal status quo or return society to its traditional way of being, nostalgia has been theorized to be characteristic of those on the political right (i.e., conservatives). In the current work, we proposed and tested the hypothesis that collective nostalgia is experienced by both conservatives and liberals, but the content of their nostalgizing differs. Across three studies in three socio-political contexts—USA (Study 1, MTurk, N = 352), Canada (Study 2, student sample, N = 154), and England (Study 3, online panel, N = 2,345)—we found that both conservatives and liberals experienced collective nostalgia for a more homogenous and open society. However, conservatives experienced more homogeneity-focused collective nostalgia, whereas liberals experienced more openness-focused collective nostalgia. Replicating previous findings, homogeneity-focused nostalgia emerged as a positive, whereas openness-focused nostalgia emerged as a negative, predictor of intergroup prejudice. The results have both theoretical and practical significance for understanding political attitudes and behaviors. To the point, variance in the conservative and liberal political agendas is, in part, a function of a difference in their respective predisposition to nostalgize about and thus desire the return of a particular aspect of the in-group’s past.
Text
Stefaniak et al., 2021, Frontiers
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 February 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2021
Published date: 29 March 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 448097
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448097
ISSN: 2673-3145
PURE UUID: d622bd2b-ee1d-4690-ba76-a1461d19a2d2
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Date deposited: 01 Apr 2021 15:58
Last modified: 16 Apr 2024 01:37
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Author:
Anna Stefaniak
Author:
Michael Jeremy Adam Wohl
Author:
Anouk Smeekes
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