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izvor podataka: crosbi

Intergenerational transmission of historical memories and social-distance attitudes in post- war second-generation Croatians (CROSBI ID 240629)

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Svob, Connie ; Brown, Norman R. ; Takšić, Vladimir ; Katulić, Katarina ; Žauhar, Valnea Intergenerational transmission of historical memories and social-distance attitudes in post- war second-generation Croatians // Memory & cognition, 44 (2016), 6; 846-855. doi: 10.3758/s13421-016-0607-x

Podaci o odgovornosti

Svob, Connie ; Brown, Norman R. ; Takšić, Vladimir ; Katulić, Katarina ; Žauhar, Valnea

engleski

Intergenerational transmission of historical memories and social-distance attitudes in post- war second-generation Croatians

Intergenerational transmission of memory is a process by which biographical knowledge contributes to the construction of collective memory (representation of a shared past). We investigated the intergenerational transmission of war-related memories and social-distance attitudes in second-generation post-war Croatians. We compared 2 groups of young adults from (1) Eastern Croatia (extensively affected by the war) and (2) Western Croatia (affected relatively less by the war). Participants were asked to (a) recall the 10 most important events that occurred in one of their parents’ lives, (b) estimate the calendar years of each, and (c) provide scale ratings on them. Additionally, (d) all participants completed a modified Bogardus Social Distance scale, as well as an (e) War Events Checklist for their parents’ lives. There were several findings. First, approximately two- thirds of Eastern Croatians and one-half of Western Croatians reported war-related events from their parents’ lives. Second, war-related memories impacted the second-generation’s identity to a greater extent than did non–war- related memories ; this effect was significantly greater in Eastern Croatians than in Western Croatians. Third, war-related events displayed markedly different mnemonic characteristics than non–war-related events. Fourth, the temporal distribution of events surrounding the war produced an upheaval bump, suggesting major transitions (e.g., war) contribute to the way collective memory is formed. And, finally, outright social ostracism and aggression toward out-groups were rarely expressed, independent of region. Nonetheless, social-distance scores were notably higher in Eastern Croatia than in Western Croatia.

intergenerational transmission ; collective memory ; transition theory ; autobiographical memory ; xenophobia ; Croatian War

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Podaci o izdanju

44 (6)

2016.

846-855

objavljeno

0090-502X

1532-5946

10.3758/s13421-016-0607-x

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Psihologija

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