A multiple identity approach to gender: Identification with women, identification with feminists, and their interaction

Jolien A. van Breen*, Russell Spears, Toon Kuppens, Soledad de Lemus

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

56 Citations (Scopus)
363 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Across four studies, we examine multiple identities in the context of gender and propose that women's attitudes toward gender group membership are governed by two largely orthogonal dimensions of gender identity: identification with women and identification with feminists. We argue that identification with women reflects attitudes toward the content society gives to group membership: what does it mean to be a woman in terms of group characteristics, interests and values? Identification with feminists, on the other hand, is a politicized identity dimension reflecting attitudes toward the social position of the group: what does it mean to be a woman in terms of disadvantage, inequality, and relative status? We examine the utility of this multiple identity approach in four studies. Study 1 showed that identification with women reflects attitudes toward group characteristics, such as femininity and self-stereotyping, while identification with feminists reflects attitudes toward the group's social position, such as perceived sexism. The two dimensions are shown to be largely independent, and as such provide support for the multiple identity approach. In Studies 2-4, we examine the utility of this multiple identity approach in predicting qualitative differences in gender attitudes. Results show that specific combinations of identification with women and feminists predicted attitudes toward collective action and gender stereotypes. Higher identification with feminists led to endorsement of radical collective action (Study 2) and critical attitudes toward gender stereotypes (Studies 3-4), especially at lower levels of identification with women. The different combinations of high vs. low identification with women and feminists can be thought of as reflecting four theoretical identity "types." A woman can be (1) strongly identified with neither women nor feminists ("low identifier"), (2) strongly identified with women but less so with feminists ("traditional identifier"), (3) strongly identified with both women and feminists ("dual identifier"), or (4) strongly identified with feminists but less so with women ("distinctive feminist"). In sum, by considering identification with women and identification with feminists as multiple identities we aim to show how the multiple identity approach predicts distinct attitudes to gender issues and offer a new perspective on gender identity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1019
Number of pages21
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume8
Issue numberJUN
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30-Jun-2017

Keywords

  • Femininity
  • Gender
  • Group membership
  • Identification with feminists
  • Identification with women
  • Multiple identities
  • Social identity
  • Stereotypes
  • DEFINITION
  • INTRAGROUP
  • COLLECTIVE ACTION
  • IN-GROUP
  • SELF-IDENTIFICATION
  • BENEVOLENT SEXISM
  • GROUP MEMBERSHIP
  • SOCIAL IDENTITY
  • STEREOTYPES
  • ATTITUDES

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