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Effects of the Generic Masculine and Its Alternatives in Germanophone Countries : A Multi-Lab Replication and Extension of Stahlberg, Sczesny, and Braun (2001)

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2024

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Brohmer, Hilmar
Hofer, Gabriela
Bauch, Sebastian A.
Beitner, Julia
Berkessel, Jana B.
Corcoran, Katja
Gruber, Freya M.
Giuliani, Fiorina
Jauk, Emanuel
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International Review of Social Psychology. Ubiquity Press. 2024, 37(1), S. 1-25. ISSN 2119-4130. eISSN 2397-8570. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.5334/irsp.522

Zusammenfassung

In languages such as German, French, or Hindi, plural forms of job occupations and societal roles are often in a generic-masculine form instead of a gender-inclusive form. Although meant as ‘generic,’ this generic-masculine form excludes women from everyday language. Specifically, listeners and readers are less likely to think of women when this form is used. Due to the societal relevance of gender-inclusive language, we directly replicated and extended a classic study by Stahlberg, Sczesny, and Braun (2001, Experiment 2) in a multi-lab setting and as a registered confirmatory report. We prompted participants from German-speaking countries to name up to three celebrities each in six categories (e.g., ‘Name three politicians’ or ‘(…) singers’). We then counted how often participants mentioned women. Participants were either prompted with the generic-masculine form, a neutralized control form or one out of three gender-inclusive forms. Our data from twelve labs and N = 2,697 participants replicated the original effect: when prompted with gender-inclusive forms participants mentioned more women than when the generic masculine and the control form were used. Moreover, the effect remained present in multilevel models and when controlling for participants’ sex and their perceived base rate in these celebrity categories (i.e., the expected proportion of women). Other variables, such as political orientation or preference for gender-inclusive language, did not show large effects, either. We discuss the differences between specific gender-inclusive forms (e.g., the internal-I vs. feminine-masculine forms), implications for regulations and guidelines, as well as implications for non-binary and gender-diverse people.

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Fachgebiet (DDC)
320 Politik

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gender-inclusive language, gender-fair language, generic masculine, open data, multi- site study

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ISO 690BROHMER, Hilmar, Gabriela HOFER, Sebastian A. BAUCH, Julia BEITNER, Jana B. BERKESSEL, Katja CORCORAN, David GARCIA, Freya M. GRUBER, Fiorina GIULIANI, Emanuel JAUK, 2024. Effects of the Generic Masculine and Its Alternatives in Germanophone Countries : A Multi-Lab Replication and Extension of Stahlberg, Sczesny, and Braun (2001). In: International Review of Social Psychology. Ubiquity Press. 2024, 37(1), S. 1-25. ISSN 2119-4130. eISSN 2397-8570. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.5334/irsp.522
BibTex
@article{Brohmer2024-10-01Effec-71984,
  title={Effects of the Generic Masculine and Its Alternatives in Germanophone Countries : A Multi-Lab Replication and Extension of Stahlberg, Sczesny, and Braun (2001)},
  year={2024},
  doi={10.5334/irsp.522},
  number={1},
  volume={37},
  issn={2119-4130},
  journal={International Review of Social Psychology},
  pages={1--25},
  author={Brohmer, Hilmar and Hofer, Gabriela and Bauch, Sebastian A. and Beitner, Julia and Berkessel, Jana B. and Corcoran, Katja and Garcia, David and Gruber, Freya M. and Giuliani, Fiorina and Jauk, Emanuel}
}
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