Psychology and Neuroscience Faculty Database
Psychology and Neuroscience
Arts & Sciences
Duke University

 HOME > Arts & Sciences > pn > Faculty    Search Help Login pdf version printable version 

Publications [#253607] of Laura S. Richman

search PubMed.

Journal Articles

  1. Baumeister, RF; Smart, L; Boden, JM (1996). Relation of threatened egotism to violence and aggression: the dark side of high self-esteem.. Psychol Rev, 103(1), 5-33. (Reprinted in The Self in Social Psychology. Key Readings in Social Psychology. (pp. 240-284). Philadelphia, PA, US: Psychology Press/Taylor& Francis.). [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/22)

    Abstract:
    Conventional wisdom has regarded low self-esteem as an important cause of violence, but the opposite view is theoretically viable. An interdisciplinary review of evidence about aggression, crime, and violence contradicted the view that low self-esteem is an important cause. Instead, violence appears to be most commonly a result of threatened egotism--that is, highly favorable views of self that are disputed by some person or circumstance. Inflated, unstable, or tentative beliefs in the self's superiority may be most prone to encountering threats and hence to causing violence. The mediating process may involve directing anger outward as a way of avoiding a downward revision of the self-concept.


Duke University * Arts & Sciences * Faculty * Staff * Grad * Postdocs * Reload * Login