Volume 37, Issue 1 pp. 1-17
Research Article

Why minority group members resent impostors

Ruth Warner

Ruth Warner

University of Kansas, USA

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Matthew J. Hornsey

Corresponding Author

Matthew J. Hornsey

University of Queensland, Australia

School of Psychology, University of Queensland, St Lucia 4072, Queensland, Australia.Search for more papers by this author
Jolanda Jetten

Jolanda Jetten

University of Exeter, UK

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First published: 18 August 2006
Citations: 28

Abstract

An impostor is defined as somebody who publicly lays claim to an identity while simultaneously disguising their failure to fulfill key criteria for group membership. The current study aimed to identify why minority group members feel negatively toward impostors. In two experiments, gay participants evaluated a person who claimed to be either gay or straight. In half of the conditions the target's claims for identity were consistent with their behavior, and in the other half the target's claims for identity were inconsistent with their behavior (impostors). Participants perceived a straight target that claimed to be gay to be doing more damage to the group than a consistent straight target. This effect was mediated by ratings of the extent to which the target was threatening the distinctiveness of gay identity. Furthermore, a gay target who claimed to be straight was seen to be less likeable and was seen to be doing more damage to the group than a consistent gay target, effects that were mediated by the extent to which the target was perceived to feel shame about their group identity. Implications of the results for our understanding of impostorism are discussed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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