Abstract
The present research sought to investigate the psychological dynamics
underlying demonizing, that is, the tendency to see others as personifications of pure evilness. Building on an integrative theoretical framework, it is hypothesized that the extent to which a perpetrator matches prototypical expectations of evilness
shapes demonizing responses to offenders particularly when cognitive resources are
impaired. In two experiments, participants were asked to memorize either a difficult
or an easy telephone number (cognitive load vs. control), and were then asked to
evaluate a perpetrator who murdered a young woman (Experiment 1) or who kidnapped a child (Experiment 2). Results revealed that the extent to which the
description of the perpetrator was consistent with a prototypical evilness scheme
influenced demonizing particularly under conditions of cognitive load. It is concluded
that impairment of cognitive resources increases the influence of prototypical
evilness on demonizing
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 259-271 |
Journal | Social Justice Research |
Volume | 23 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2010 |
Keywords
- social categorizations
- punishment
- judgment
- justice