Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume 30, Issue 2, 2004, Pages 250-260

Sticks and Stones Can Break My Bones, but Ethnophaulisms Can Alter the Portrayal of Immigrants to Children (Article)

Mullen B.*
  • a Department of Psychology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13210, United States

Abstract

An archival study examined the portrayal of ethnic immigrants to children as a function of the prevailing cognitive representation of those ethnic immigrant groups in ethnophaulisms. The complexity in ethnophaulisms (and, to a lesser degree, the valence in ethnophaulisms) predicted the portrayal of ethnic immigrant groups. Overall, ethnic immigrant groups characterized in terms of ethnophaulisms of low complexity were less frequently present in children's literature, children from these ethnic groups were described more in terms of physical appearance than in terms of personal traits, fictional child characters from those ethnic groups were portrayed with smaller heads and with lower verbal complexity, and the folksongs attributed to these groups had a more negative affective tone. The implications of these results for approaches to intergroup relations are considered.

Author Keywords

Ethnic immigrants Portrayals Ethnophaulisms Ethnic slurs

Index Keywords

cultural anthropology perception social psychology Stereotyping perceptive discrimination music human Ethnic Groups ethnic group child behavior Discrimination (Psychology) Humans attitude male female Article migration Emigration and Immigration Social Perception Mass Media mass medium Culture Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0942300558&doi=10.1177%2f0146167203259937&partnerID=40&md5=04a048900af4077b506a91925781bc7c

DOI: 10.1177/0146167203259937
ISSN: 01461672
Cited by: 16
Original Language: English