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Just because I’m great (and you’re not): when, why, and how narcissistic individuals give gifts to others

Just because I’m great (and you’re not): when, why, and how narcissistic individuals give gifts to others
Just because I’m great (and you’re not): when, why, and how narcissistic individuals give gifts to others
Objective: we examined the roles of Narcissistic Admiration and Narcissistic Rivalry in gift giving. We hypothesized that Admirative and Rivalrous individuals diverge in their likelihood of giving gifts.

Method: across six studies (ΣN = 2,198), we used correlational and experimental methodology, and capitalized on both scenarios and actual gift giving.

Results: Narcissistic Admiration was positively, but Narcissistic Rivalry was negatively, associated with gift-giving likelihood (Studies 1-2). These findings were explained by diverging communal motivations for gift giving (Study 3). Consistent with the notion that Rivalrous individuals are less likely to give gifts for communal reasons because they feel threatened by social closeness, the negative association between Narcissistic Rivalry and gift-giving likelihood was attenuated when the gift recipient was more socially distant (vs. close; Study 4). Further, gifts that are recipient-centric (e.g., customized with a recipient’s name) are less focused on attributes of the giver and less likely to foster social closeness. Therefore, consistent with Admirative individuals’ use of gift giving to promote themselves as a superior communal relationship partner, the positive association between Narcissistic Admiration and gift-giving likelihood was attenuated for gifts that were recipient-centric (Study 5). Socially desirable responding, self-esteem, and fear of failure (Study SM1) did not account for the findings.
gift giving, narcissism, narcissistic admiration, narcissistic rivalry, personality
0022-3506
Kirk, Colleen P.
4a0c3903-f9d1-49a7-b3a7-99eb5ea7d66f
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Givi, Julian
a14f4e10-aa38-482e-a247-6021789fb323
Kirk, Colleen P.
4a0c3903-f9d1-49a7-b3a7-99eb5ea7d66f
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Givi, Julian
a14f4e10-aa38-482e-a247-6021789fb323

Kirk, Colleen P., Sedikides, Constantine and Givi, Julian (2024) Just because I’m great (and you’re not): when, why, and how narcissistic individuals give gifts to others. Journal of Personality. (doi:10.1111/jopy.12983).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: we examined the roles of Narcissistic Admiration and Narcissistic Rivalry in gift giving. We hypothesized that Admirative and Rivalrous individuals diverge in their likelihood of giving gifts.

Method: across six studies (ΣN = 2,198), we used correlational and experimental methodology, and capitalized on both scenarios and actual gift giving.

Results: Narcissistic Admiration was positively, but Narcissistic Rivalry was negatively, associated with gift-giving likelihood (Studies 1-2). These findings were explained by diverging communal motivations for gift giving (Study 3). Consistent with the notion that Rivalrous individuals are less likely to give gifts for communal reasons because they feel threatened by social closeness, the negative association between Narcissistic Rivalry and gift-giving likelihood was attenuated when the gift recipient was more socially distant (vs. close; Study 4). Further, gifts that are recipient-centric (e.g., customized with a recipient’s name) are less focused on attributes of the giver and less likely to foster social closeness. Therefore, consistent with Admirative individuals’ use of gift giving to promote themselves as a superior communal relationship partner, the positive association between Narcissistic Admiration and gift-giving likelihood was attenuated for gifts that were recipient-centric (Study 5). Socially desirable responding, self-esteem, and fear of failure (Study SM1) did not account for the findings.

Text
Kirk et al., 2024, JOPY - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 19 October 2026.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 October 2024
Published date: 19 October 2024
Keywords: gift giving, narcissism, narcissistic admiration, narcissistic rivalry, personality

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496137
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496137
ISSN: 0022-3506
PURE UUID: cf242f87-a1ef-4475-a01d-f7e16e339865
ORCID for Constantine Sedikides: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4036-889X

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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2024 17:31
Last modified: 06 Dec 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Colleen P. Kirk
Author: Julian Givi

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