Ideology and Interpersonal Emotion Management: Redefining Identity in Two Support Groups

This ethnographic study demonstrates the process by which our emotions are constructed not only by ourselves but also by others. Support groups for divorce or bereavement are used to illustrate the process of interpersonal emotion management. The study considers how support groups with differing ide...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social psychology quarterly 1997-06, Vol.60 (2), p.153-171
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description This ethnographic study demonstrates the process by which our emotions are constructed not only by ourselves but also by others. Support groups for divorce or bereavement are used to illustrate the process of interpersonal emotion management. The study considers how support groups with differing ideologies produce dissimilar situational definitions for the loss of a spouse. Each of these definitions promotes different cognitive and effective outcomes for the participants. Despite these differences in definitions, the group leaders use a largely identical process of interpersonal emotion management, in which they redefine not only the event of spousal loss but also the sufferer's very identity. These redefinitions encourage understandings and emotions that coincide with the groups' own idelogical perspectives. In addition, the results of the study are unexpectedly congruent with affect control theory, thus demonstrating that the propositions of this theory inform qualitative as well as quantitative research.
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Support groups for divorce or bereavement are used to illustrate the process of interpersonal emotion management. The study considers how support groups with differing ideologies produce dissimilar situational definitions for the loss of a spouse. Each of these definitions promotes different cognitive and effective outcomes for the participants. Despite these differences in definitions, the group leaders use a largely identical process of interpersonal emotion management, in which they redefine not only the event of spousal loss but also the sufferer's very identity. These redefinitions encourage understandings and emotions that coincide with the groups' own idelogical perspectives. In addition, the results of the study are unexpectedly congruent with affect control theory, thus demonstrating that the propositions of this theory inform qualitative as well as quantitative research.</abstract><cop>Washington, DC</cop><pub>American Sociological Association</pub><doi>10.2307/2787102</doi><tpages>19</tpages></addata></record>
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source Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Affective Behavior
Anger
Biological and medical sciences
Coping
Definitions
Divorce
Emotion
Emotional distress
Emotional states
Emotional support
Emotions
Ethnography
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Grief
Grounded Theory
Group Dynamics
Group facilitation
Identity
Ideological aspects
Ideology
Interpersonal communication
Interpersonal Relations
Leaders
Los Angeles, California
Management
Personality. Affectivity
Psychological Patterns
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Redefinition
Resistance (Psychology)
Role
Self Help Groups
Social interaction
Social interactions. Communication. Group processes
Social psychology
Social Support
Social Support Groups
Spouses
Statistical Analysis
Stress
Support groups
title Ideology and Interpersonal Emotion Management: Redefining Identity in Two Support Groups
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