Construction and Deconstruction of Essence in Representating Social Groups: Identity Projects, Stereotyping, and Racism

Authors: WAGNER, WOLFGANG1; HOLTZ, PETER2; KASHIMA, YOSHIHISA3

Source: Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, Volume 39, Number 3, September 2009 , pp. 363-383(21)

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

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Abstract:

Projecting essence onto a social category means to think, talk, and act as if the category were a discrete natural kind and as if its members were all endowed with the same immutable attributes determined by the category's essence. Essentializing may happen implicitly or on purpose in representing ingroups and outgroups. We argue that essentializing is a versatile representational tool (a) that is used to create identity in groups with chosen membership in order to make the group appear as a unitary entity, (b) that outsiders often draw on a group's essentialist self-construal in their judgements about the groups, (c) that judgements about members of forced social categories are often informed by essentialist thinking that easily switches to discrimination and racism, and (d) that under certain historical and political conditions members of social categories and groups may contest their essentialized identity, such as parts of the feminist movement, or that they may attempt to reconstruct an essentialized identity, such as parts of the homosexual movement or the largely defunct European nobility. Besides explicit political and power interests, we see communication processes and language use as a tacit force driving essentialization of social categories.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5914.2009.00408.x

Affiliations: 1: University of the Basque CountrySan Sebastián, Spain,Johannes Kepler UniversityLinz, Austria 2: Johannes Kepler UniversityLinz, Austria 3: University of MelbourneAustralia, Email: w.wagner@jku.at

Publication date: 2009-09-01

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