AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how White students felt emotionally after thinking about their race, using interviews and written reflections.
  • Researchers examined different feelings like White guilt, empathy, and fear to see how they affected these emotional responses.
  • They found that feelings about racism, like fear or empathy, changed the way White students reacted emotionally when reflecting on being White.

Article Abstract

In the present investigation, the authors explored potential predictors of White students' general emotional responses after they reflected on their Whiteness in a semi-structured interview (n = 88) or written reflection (n = 187). Specifically, the authors examined how color-blindness (i.e., awareness of White privilege) and racial affect (i.e., White empathy, White guilt, and White fear), assessed before the interview or written reflection, may predict positive and negative emotional responses, assessed immediately following the interview or written reflection. Furthermore, the authors considered whether affective costs of racism to Whites moderated the association between racial color-blindness and general positive and negative emotional responses of White students. Findings indicated that affective costs of racism moderated associations between racial color-blindness and general emotional responses. Specifically, White fear moderated associations for the written reflection group whereas White empathy moderated an association in the interview. White guilt did not moderate, but instead directly predicted a negative emotional response in the written reflection group. Findings suggest that the interaction between racial color-blindness and racial affect is important when predicting students' emotional responses to reflecting on their Whiteness. Implications for educators and administrators are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2907903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0019299DOI Listing

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