The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals

Master of Science === Department of Psychological Sciences === Donald A. Saucier === The current research examined whether participants’ levels of racial prejudice impact their perceptions of a Black racial slur (“nigga”) used by a Black individual toward a White individual. The “racism justificatio...

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Main Author: O'Dea, Conor James
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35550
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-355502017-07-15T15:49:37Z The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals O'Dea, Conor James Racial slurs Slur reappropriation Prejudice Derogation Affiliation Intergroup processes Master of Science Department of Psychological Sciences Donald A. Saucier The current research examined whether participants’ levels of racial prejudice impact their perceptions of a Black racial slur (“nigga”) used by a Black individual toward a White individual. The “racism justification hypothesis” predicts racial prejudice will be negatively related to perceptions of offensiveness due to motivations to trivialize racial slurs which allows for increased use of the slur by individuals higher in prejudice. The “hierarchy defense hypothesis” predicts racial prejudice will be positively related to more negative perceptions of the slur due to White individuals seeking to resist affiliation with Black individuals and perceiving affiliative attempts as threatening. Consistent with the hierarchy defense hypothesis, the results showed racial prejudice predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions, and lower positively expressive perceptions following “nigga” being used by a Black individual toward a White individual (Study 1). In Study 2, the current research examined whether motivations to trivialize racial slurs (i.e., racism justification) versus participants’ experiences of threat (i.e., hierarchy defense) mediated the relationships between racial prejudice and perceptions of “nigga” used by a Black individual toward a White individual. Consistent with the hierarchy defense hypothesis, racial prejudice, through status hierarchy threat, predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions, and lower positively expressive perceptions. The racism justification hypothesis was also supported. Participants’ levels of racial prejudice, through racism trivialization, were generally related to lower perceptions of the slur as offensive and greater perceptions of the slur as positively expressive. The current research then examined participants’ perceptions of “nigga” reciprocated by the White individual toward the Black individual. Interestingly, racial prejudice, through status hierarchy threat, predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions and lower positively expressive perceptions. Racial prejudice, through racism trivialization, predicted generally lower offensive perceptions and greater positively expressive perceptions. Thus, participants may have used their experiences of threat as justification for explicit prejudice toward the Black individual (i.e., perceiving the slur as more offensive and negative), while individuals who experienced trivialization motivations attempted to decrease their experiences of suppression factors by perceiving the slur as less offensive, allowing for increased use of the slur. Implications for these findings are discussed. 2017-05-04T14:23:13Z 2017-05-04T14:23:13Z 2017 August Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35550 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Racial slurs
Slur reappropriation
Prejudice
Derogation
Affiliation
Intergroup processes
spellingShingle Racial slurs
Slur reappropriation
Prejudice
Derogation
Affiliation
Intergroup processes
O'Dea, Conor James
The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
description Master of Science === Department of Psychological Sciences === Donald A. Saucier === The current research examined whether participants’ levels of racial prejudice impact their perceptions of a Black racial slur (“nigga”) used by a Black individual toward a White individual. The “racism justification hypothesis” predicts racial prejudice will be negatively related to perceptions of offensiveness due to motivations to trivialize racial slurs which allows for increased use of the slur by individuals higher in prejudice. The “hierarchy defense hypothesis” predicts racial prejudice will be positively related to more negative perceptions of the slur due to White individuals seeking to resist affiliation with Black individuals and perceiving affiliative attempts as threatening. Consistent with the hierarchy defense hypothesis, the results showed racial prejudice predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions, and lower positively expressive perceptions following “nigga” being used by a Black individual toward a White individual (Study 1). In Study 2, the current research examined whether motivations to trivialize racial slurs (i.e., racism justification) versus participants’ experiences of threat (i.e., hierarchy defense) mediated the relationships between racial prejudice and perceptions of “nigga” used by a Black individual toward a White individual. Consistent with the hierarchy defense hypothesis, racial prejudice, through status hierarchy threat, predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions, and lower positively expressive perceptions. The racism justification hypothesis was also supported. Participants’ levels of racial prejudice, through racism trivialization, were generally related to lower perceptions of the slur as offensive and greater perceptions of the slur as positively expressive. The current research then examined participants’ perceptions of “nigga” reciprocated by the White individual toward the Black individual. Interestingly, racial prejudice, through status hierarchy threat, predicted greater offensive and negatively expressive perceptions and lower positively expressive perceptions. Racial prejudice, through racism trivialization, predicted generally lower offensive perceptions and greater positively expressive perceptions. Thus, participants may have used their experiences of threat as justification for explicit prejudice toward the Black individual (i.e., perceiving the slur as more offensive and negative), while individuals who experienced trivialization motivations attempted to decrease their experiences of suppression factors by perceiving the slur as less offensive, allowing for increased use of the slur. Implications for these findings are discussed.
author O'Dea, Conor James
author_facet O'Dea, Conor James
author_sort O'Dea, Conor James
title The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
title_short The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
title_full The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
title_fullStr The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
title_full_unstemmed The effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of Black slurs used by Black individuals toward White individuals
title_sort effect of racial prejudice on perceptions of black slurs used by black individuals toward white individuals
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35550
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