Collective Memory as Identity Content After Ethnic Conflict: An Exploratory Study

In line with recent theorizing on identity content and intergroup attitudes, it is argued that collective memory (shared understandings of group history as narratives of the past) forms part of the narrative content of group identities and inform group members' attitudes toward outgroups. Surve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Peace and conflict 2013-02, Vol.19 (1), p.23-33
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description In line with recent theorizing on identity content and intergroup attitudes, it is argued that collective memory (shared understandings of group history as narratives of the past) forms part of the narrative content of group identities and inform group members' attitudes toward outgroups. Survey data from 82 Bosnian Muslim immigrants and refugees resettled in the United States showed that endorsement of narratives of the past that emphasize prewar coexistence of groups interacted with ethnic identification to predict attitudes toward Bosnian Croats, but not toward Bosnian Serbs. Even though ethnic identification was a strong negative predictor of attitudes toward Croats, its effect was significantly reduced among participants who endorsed a narrative of past coexistence. Attitudes toward Bosnian Serbs, however, were uniformly low and only predicted by attitudes toward the other outgroup, Bosnian Croats. Implications for studies of intergroup relations and reconciliation efforts were discussed.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Attitudes
Collective Memory
Ethnic Identity
Female
Group Identity
Human
Identity
Immigrants
Intergroup Dynamics
Intergroup Relations
Male
Memory
Muslims
Narratives
Racial and Ethnic Attitudes
Racial and Ethnic Groups
Refugees
Self-Concept
title Collective Memory as Identity Content After Ethnic Conflict: An Exploratory Study
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