Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and...

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Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004

Transcript of Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and...

Page 1: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Culture and Aggression

3 June 2004

Page 2: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Lecture Summary

• Defining the Culture of Honor– Historical and anthropological data

• Differences in homicide rates between the North and South– Archival analyses

• Differences in attitudes towards violence btw the North and South– Survey data

• Insult, anger, and aggression– Experimental data

• Violence, social policy, and the law– Archival, Survey, and Quasi-Experimental data

Page 3: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

What is a Culture of Honor?

• Occurs when– Wealth is portable

• e.g. herding vs. agriculture

– Law is ineffective• e.g. frontier or otherwise

hostile lands

• Therefore, must keep up the appearance of strength– e.g. Navaho vs. Zuni

cultures– e.g. Scotch-Irish herders vs.

Dutch farmers

• “Honor”:– “respect that situates an

individual socially and determines his right to precedence”

• Key aspect of a culture of honor:– Insults must be dealt with swiftly and violently

– “The Southerner who can avoid both arguments and adultery is as safe as any other American…”

Page 4: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Killers and their Victims by Size of City

0

2

4

6

8

10

New England

Mid Atlantic

Midwest Pacific Mountain Southwest South

Offenders VictimsDV: Rate per 100,000

Small City, Population 10,000-50,000

Page 5: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Killers and their Victims by Size of City Big City, Population 200,000 plus

DV: Rate per 100,000 Offenders Victims

0

5

10

15

20

25

New England

Middle Atlantic

Midwest Pacific Mountain SW South

Page 6: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Homicide Rates Within the South

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

Moist Plains Hills and Dry Plains

Rate per 100,000

Page 7: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Homicide Rates Within the South: Rural Areas (populations < 2,500)

Per Capita Income ($1000’s)

0 1 2 3 4 5

Moist Plains

Hills and Dry Plains

Average July Temperature (degrees F)

0 20 40 60 80 100

Moist Plains

Hills and Dry Plains

% Enslaved in 1860

0 10 20 30 40 50

Moist Plains

Hills and Dry Plains

Page 8: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Types of Murders Committed inthe South/SW vs. the non-South

Felony-Related Argument-Related

0

1

2

3

4

5

Non-South South & SW0

2

4

6

8

Non-South South & SW

Felony-Related Argument-Related

Cities w. Population < 200,000 Cities w. Population > 200,000

Page 9: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Summary So Far

• The South is more violent than the non-South– BUT most of this is explained by argument-related

violence (not felonies)

• The usual alternate explanations (SES, temperature, history of slavery) do not explain this violence

• The only variable that seems to explain this is history of herding (vs. agriculture)

Page 10: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Violence for Protection of Self, Family, and Property

0

20

40

60

80

100

“A man has the right to kill another

man in self-defense”

Non-South South & SW

Per

cen

t w

ho

“A

gre

e a

Gre

at D

eal”

“A man has the right to kill to

defend his family”

“A man has the right to kill to

defend his house”

Page 11: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Violence for Social Control:Protection of Institutions

0

10

20

30

40

50

let it go shoot to kill let it go shoot to kill let it go shoot to kill

hoodlums students big city riots

South Non-South

% S

ayin

g “S

omet

imes

” or

“A

lmos

t A

lway

s”

Page 12: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Violence in Response to Affronts: The Fred Scenarios

0

5

10

15

20

25

Violent response is“extremely justified”

Fred would be“not much of a man”

if response not violent

Non-south South

Page 13: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Honor and Friendship Disruption

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

fist fight insult

Non-south South

DV: % who would be angry for at least a month.

Page 14: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Honor and Childrearing

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

support spanking son should fight boy who hit him

son should fight bully

Nonsouth South

Page 15: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Honor and Gun Control

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

carry weapon

bought gun

nonviolentpreventativemeasures

non-south south

0

10

20

30

40

makes home safer

makes homemore dangerous

DV: % taking protective measure DV: % endorsement

Page 16: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Summary So Far

• Southerners are more violent than non-Southerners in specific ways:– More violent response to insults

• Even with friends

– More violent response to threats to self, property, or family

– More likely to use guns for self-protection– More likely to teach violence to their children

• Does this violence translate to real behavior?– So far these data are from archival reports and large-

scale surveys

Page 17: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

“Honor” Experiments

• Ss are white, non-Hispanic, non-Jewish male UMich students– ½ are Northerners, ½ are Southerners– Average family income is $85K for

Northerners, $95.5K for Southerners

• All 3 expts use the same basic situation– A confederate bumps into an unsuspecting

subject as he walks down a narrow hallway, and then insults him

Page 18: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 1

• Cognitive and emotional reactions to an insult• Cover story (response time constraints on

judgments)• IVs:

– bump/insult vs. control– insult prime vs. neutral scenario completions

• DVs: – rating of Ss’ anger and amusement from facial

expression, body language, verbal reaction (both on scales from 1-7)

– scenario completions coded for violence

Page 19: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 1 ResultsNorth South

0

20

40

60

80

100

anger > amusement

amusement > anger

0

20

40

60

80

insulted not insulted

Note: Northerner diff is not significant.DV here is % violent completions.

Page 20: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 2

• Physiological reactions to insults

• Cover story: measuring blood sugar changes which Ss do tasks

• IV: bump/insult vs. control

• DV: BL vs. post-bump/control cortisol and testosterone

Page 21: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 2 Results

0 5 10 15

Control

Insult

% Change in Testosterone Level

0 20 40 60 80 100

Control

Insult

% Change in Cortisol LevelNorth South

Page 22: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 3

• Behavioral reactions to an insult– The “chicken” manipulation

• IV: bump/insult vs. control• DV:

– inches before “chickening out”– firmness of handshake (evaluated by confed)– dominance rating (evaluated by confed)– self-rated masculine status

Page 23: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Experiment 3 Results

3.6 3.8 4 4.2 4.4 4.6

Control

Insult

Confederate’s Ratings of Firmness of Handshake

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

Control

Insult

Distance at which Subject Gave Way to Confederate (inches)

Page 24: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

More Expt 3 Results

Perceived masculine status self-ratings

2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6

Control andPrivate Insult

Public Insult

0 1 2 3 4 5

Control

Insult

Confederate’s ratings of Subject’s dominanceNorth South

Page 25: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Summary

• Southerners feel more damaged (reputation for strength, masculinity) by an insult than do Northerners

• S get more upset by insults than N (cortisol, emotion ratings)

• S more cognitively primed for violence in insult situations than N (violent story completions)

• S are more physiologically prepared for violence than N (testosterone)

• S are more domineering after insults than are N (expt 3)• S behave more physically aggressive after insults than do

N (“chicken”)

Page 26: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Collective Expressions of the Culture of Honor

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

North South

Strictness of Gun Control Laws

0

20

40

60

80

100

Retreat Surrender Compliance

% of states in North vs. South requiring retreat, surrender, and compliance to demands rather than killing assailant

Page 27: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

More Collective Expressions…

0

20

40

60

80

100

% states prohibiting corporal punishment

in schools

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

all states states where corporalpunishment allowed

% of students given corporal punishment, 1989-1990

North South

Page 28: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Capital Punishment

0

20

40

60

80

100

% states allowingcapital punishment

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

% deathsentences

0

1

2

3

4

5

% executions

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

% states carrying out executions

North South

Page 29: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Honor Letter Field Experiment

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Honor Letter Control Letter

Compliance with job applicant’s requests

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Honor Letter Control Letter

Warmth of response tohonor/control letter

North South

Page 30: Culture and Aggression 3 June 2004. Lecture Summary Defining the Culture of Honor –Historical and anthropological data Differences in homicide rates between.

Newspaper Field Experiment

0

1

2

3

4

5

Provocation

-0.15

-0.1

-0.05

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

Blameworthiness

0

20

40

60

80

100

% newspapers treating honor offender more sympathetically

than control offender

North South