Status and power stratification seem virtually inevitable in human societies. The advantages of the powerful and higher status are exaggerated by inequality, increasing cross-class resentment. Across nations, high-SES people are stereotyped as competent but cold and low-SES people as incompetent (and sometimes as warm). So, upper classes feel disliked and lower classes feel disrespected. These societal stereotypes provide a rational account for inequality, a convenient target of resentment, and a strategy to maintain unequal systems. Additionally, more unequal societies use more mixed, ambivalent stereotype: Stereotypes of deserving and undeserving poor or deserving and undeserving rich disguise or at least complicate the blunt facts of unequal advantage. These mixed stereotypes operate in both directions, up and down the hierarchy (they are mutual), thus affecting cross-class interpersonal interactions. Reconciliation is possible but requires structural changes. Awareness of inequality and changes in ideologies supporting inequality (i.e., meritocracy) may also help the process. But all social classes have a role to play.
Fiske, S., Durante, F. (2019). Mutual status stereotypes maintain inequality. In J. Jetten, K. Peters (a cura di), The Social Psychology of Inequality (pp. 335-348). Springer International Publishing [10.1007/978-3-030-28856-3_21].
Mutual status stereotypes maintain inequality
Durante, F
2019
Abstract
Status and power stratification seem virtually inevitable in human societies. The advantages of the powerful and higher status are exaggerated by inequality, increasing cross-class resentment. Across nations, high-SES people are stereotyped as competent but cold and low-SES people as incompetent (and sometimes as warm). So, upper classes feel disliked and lower classes feel disrespected. These societal stereotypes provide a rational account for inequality, a convenient target of resentment, and a strategy to maintain unequal systems. Additionally, more unequal societies use more mixed, ambivalent stereotype: Stereotypes of deserving and undeserving poor or deserving and undeserving rich disguise or at least complicate the blunt facts of unequal advantage. These mixed stereotypes operate in both directions, up and down the hierarchy (they are mutual), thus affecting cross-class interpersonal interactions. Reconciliation is possible but requires structural changes. Awareness of inequality and changes in ideologies supporting inequality (i.e., meritocracy) may also help the process. But all social classes have a role to play.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.