Book Chapter10.1057/9780230609181_10
Inviolable Versus Alterable Identities
Nicole Kronberger,Wolfgang Wagner +1 more
- 01 Jan 2007
- pp 177-196
15
TL;DR: One of the most frequently mentioned quotes in social representations literature is Serge Moscovici's claim that the purpose of all representations is to make something unfamiliar, or unfamiliarity itself, familiar as discussed by the authors.
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Abstract: One of the most frequently mentioned quotes in social representations literature is Serge Moscovici’s claim that the “purpose of all representations is to make something unfamiliar, or unfamiliarity itself, familiar” (1984/2001, 37). This short quote not only highlights the importance of sense-making activities but also implies the active role of social actors in understanding their worlds: the familiar is always familiar to somebody, and there is no familiarity in itself. Consequently, Moscovici concludes, a social representation of an object tells more about a group’s identity than about the nature of this object. Social representations denote what “the group thinks of itself in its relationships with the objects which affect it” (Durkheim 1895/1982, 40; cf. Moscovici and Vignaux 1994/2001, 158). Our membership in social groups constrains the ways in which we come to understand an object, and conversely, by positioning oneself with regard to an object and by the style we communicate about it, we ascertain our belonging to a particular group of people, and simultaneously distance ourselves from others (cf. Duveen and Lloyd 1986). “Just as the water level in communicating vessels changes when the content is altered at only one point, the act of categorizing an object similarly places the individual in his or her rightful place, like a bilateral lever arm whose axis is fixed in the social field common to both” (Wagner and Hayes 2005, 207; cf. Clemence 2001; Harre and van Langenhove 1999).
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885
Construction and Deconstruction of Essence in Representating Social Groups: Identity Projects, Stereotyping, and Racism
TL;DR: The authors argue that essentializing is a versatile representational tool that is used to create identity in groups with chosen membership in order to make the group appear as a unitary entity, and that outsiders often draw on a group's essentialist self-construal in their judgements about the groups.
103
Representations, Identity, and Resistance in Communication
Caroline Howarth
- 23 Mar 2011
TL;DR: For instance, this paper found that people tend to be talkative and inquisitive in conversations with people they do not know well, and relatively quiet in the comfort and intimacy of close relationships, while the reverse is true for Athabascan Indians.
Using social representations theory to make sense of climate change: what scientists and nonscientists in Australia think
Gail Moloney,Zoe Leviston,Timothy Lynam,Jennifer Price,Samantha Stone-Jovicich,Duncan C Blair +5 more
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Essentialism and attribution of monstrosity in racist discourse: Right‐wing internet postings about Africans and Jews
Peter Holtz,Wolfgang Wagner +1 more
TL;DR: This paper investigated a total of 4997 postings on an extreme right-wing Internet discussion board with regard to the groups and themes mentioned, and found that the most frequently mentioned target groups were Africans, Jews, Muslims, Poles, and Turks; the most prominent themes and contexts were conspiracy, criminality, exploitation, threats to German identity, infiltration, mind control and harassment, procreation, rape, and sex.
77
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