The social psychology of collective victimhood /

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: UPSO (University Press Scholarship Online)
Other Authors: Vollhardt, Johanna (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2020]
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • The Social Psychology of Collective Victimhood
  • Half title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contributors
  • 1. Introduction to The Social Psychology of Collective Victimhood: Examining Context, Power, and Diversity in Experiences of Collective Victimization
  • Part 1
  • 2. Transgenerational Transmission of Collective Victimhood Through a Developmental Intergroup Framework: The Lasting Power of Group Narratives of Suffering
  • 3. Collective Memory and the Legacy of the Troubles: Territoriality, Identity, and Victimhood in Northern Ireland
  • Part 2
  • 15. A Critical Race Reading of Collective Victimhood: The Precarious Case of Black Americans
  • 16. "We All Suffered!"-​The Role of Power in Rhetorical Strategies of Inclusive Victimhood and Its Consequences for Intergroup Relations
  • Part 6
  • 17. The Tendency to Feel Victimized in Interpersonal and Intergroup Relationships
  • 18. Striking at the Core: A Unified Framework of How Collective Victimhood Affects Basic Psychological Needs for Relatedness, Competence, and Autonomy
  • 19. When Two Groups Hurt Each Other: Understanding and Reducing the Negative Consequences of Collective Victimhood in Dual Conflicts
  • Part 7
  • 20. The Ethics of Researching and Writing About Collective Victimhood in Postconflict Societies
  • Index.
  • 4. The Context, Content, and Claims of Humiliation in Response to Collective Victimhood
  • 5. A Temporal Account of Collective Victimization as Existential Threat: Reconsidering Adaptive and Maladaptive Responses
  • 6. Collective Victimhood as a Form of Adaptation: A World-​Systems Perspective
  • 7. The Unifying Potential of an Appraisal Approach to the Experience of Group Victimization
  • part 3
  • 8. Studied and Understudied Collective Victim Beliefs: What Have We Learned So Far and What's Ahead?
  • 9. Community Members' Theorization of Their Collective Victimization: Deliberating the Dynamics to Islamophobia
  • 10. In the Aftermath of Historical Trauma: Perceived Moral Obligations of Current Group Members
  • part 4
  • 11. Collective Victimhood Resulting From Structural Violence
  • 12. Examining Collective Victim Beliefs Using Intersectionality
  • 13. Resentment and Redemption: On the Mobilization of Dominant Group Victimhood
  • Part 5
  • 14. Experiencing Acknowledgment Versus Denial of the Ingroup's Collective Victimization