男子气概
女性气质
东亚
现存分类群
心理学
白色(突变)
性别研究
感知
民族
南亚
种族(生物学)
发展心理学
社会心理学
地理
中国
社会学
民族学
人类学
基因
考古
神经科学
生物化学
化学
生物
进化生物学
作者
Jin X. Goh,Vlada Trofimchuk
出处
期刊:Social Cognition
[Guilford Publications]
日期:2023-12-01
卷期号:41 (6): 537-561
被引量:3
标识
DOI:10.1521/soco.2023.41.6.537
摘要
Gendered race theory argues that in the United States, Asian men are perceived as more feminine and less masculine than Black and White men. However, extant research has focused predominantly on East Asians while overlooking South Asians. In five studies (N = 1,773 U.S. participants), we examined the perceived femininity-masculinity of East and South Asian men. East Asian men were perceived as more feminine and less masculine than South Asian, White, and Black men. South Asian men's perceived femininity-masculinity depends on whether they have facial hair or not. South Asian men with facial hair were perceived as less feminine, more masculine, and more threatening than men from other racial groups. This hyper-masculinization of South Asian men is likely due to alignment of the bearded terrorist stereotypes with facial hair cues. Results for South and East Asian women were inconsistent. This research highlights the importance of disaggregating Asian targets in social cognition theories.
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