The Authoritarian Personality
9781788731645, 9781788731669, 9781788731652
What makes a fascist? Are there character traits that make someone more likely to vote for the far right? The Authoritar
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Pages 1072
Year 2019
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Table of contents :
INTRODUCTION BY PETER E. GORDON
REMARKS ON THE AUTHORITARIAN PERSONALITY BY T. W. ADORNO
FOREWORD TO STUDIES IN PREJUDICE
PREFACE BY MAX HORKHEIMER
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I.INTRODUCTION
A. THE PROBLEM
B. METHODOLOGY
1. General Characteristics of the Method; 2. The Techniques
C. PROCEDURES IN THE COLLECTION OF DATA
1. The Groups Studied; 2. The Distribution and Collection of Questionnaires; 3. The Selection of Subjects for Intensive Clinical Study
PART I
THE MEASUREMENT OF IDEOLOGICAL TRENDS
II.THE CONTRASTING IDEOLOGIES OF TWO COLLEGE MEN: A PRELIMINARY VIEW—R. Nevitt Sanford
A. INTRODUCTION
B. MACK: A MAN HIGH ON ETHNOCENTRISM
C. LARRY: A MAN LOW ON ETHNOCENTRISM
D. ANALYSIS OF THE TWO CASES
1. Ideology Concerning the Jews; 2. General Ethnocentrism; 3. Politics; 4. Religion; 5. Vocation and Income
III.THE STUDY OF ANTI-SEMITIC IDEOLOGY-Daniel J. Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. CONSTRUCTION OF THE ANTI-SEMITISM (A-S) SCALE
1. General Rules in Item Formulation; 2. Major Subdivisions or Areas: The Subscales; 3. The Total Anti-Semitism (A-S) Scale
C. RESULTS: STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE SCALE
1. Reliability; 2. Intercorrelations of the Subscales; 3. Internal Consistency: Statistical Analysis of the Individual Items
D. THE SHORT FORM OF THE A-S SCALE
E. VALIDATION BY CASE STUDIES: THE RESPONSES OF MACK AND LARRY ON THE A-S SCALE
F. DISCUSSION: THE STRUCTURE OF ANTI-SEMITIC IDEOLOGY
IV.THE STUDY OF ETHNOCENTRIC IDEOLOGY-Daniel J. Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. CONSTRUCTION OF THE ETHNOCENTRISM (E) SCALE
1. Major Subdivisions or Areas: The Subscales; 2. The Total Ethnocentrism (E) Scale
C. RESULTS: STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE SCALE
1. Reliability; 2. Intercorrelations Among the Sub-scales; 3. Internal Consistency: Statistical Analysis of the Individual Items; 4. Second Form of the E Scale (Form 78)
D. THE INCLUSION OF ANTI-SEMITISM WITHIN GENERAL ETHNOCENTRISM
1. The Third Form of the E Scale (Form 60); 2. The Fourth Form of the E Scale (Forms 45 and 40); 3. A Suggested Final E Scale
E. VALIDATION BY CASE STUDIES: THE RESPONSES OF MACK AND LARRY ON THE E SCALE
F. CONCLUSIONS: THE STRUCTURE OF ETHNOCENTRIC IDEOLOGY
V.POLITICO-ECONOMIC IDEOLOGY AND GROUP MEMBERSHIPS IN RELATION TO ETHNOCENTRISM—Daniel J. Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. CONSTRUCTION OF THE POLITICO-ECONOMIC CONSERVATISM (PEC) SCALE
1. Some Major Trends in Contemporary Liberalism and Conservatism; 2. The Initial PEC Scale (Form 78); 3. The Second PEC Scale (Form 60); 4. The Third PEC Scale (Forms 45 and 40); 5. Discussion: Some Patterns of Contemporary Liberalism and Conservatism
C. THE RELATION RETWEEN ETHNOCENTRISM AND CONSERVATISM
D. VALIDATION BY CASE STUDIES: THE RESPONSES OF MACK AND LARRY ON THE PEC SCALE
E. THE RELATION BETWEEN ETHNOCENTRISM AND MEMBERSHIP IN VARIOUS POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC GROUPINGS
F. CONCLUSIONS
VI.ETHNOCENTRISM IN RELATION TO SOME RELIGIOUS ATTITUDES AND PRACTICES-R. Nevitt Sanford
A. INTRODUCTION
B. RESULTS
1. Religious Group Memberships; 2. “Importance” of Religion and the Church; 3. Scale Items
C. DISCUSSION
D. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
VII.THE MEASUREMENT OF IMPLICIT ANTIDEMOCRATIC TRENDS-R. Nevitt Sanford, T. W. Adorno, Else Frenkel-Brunswik, and Daniel J. Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. CONSTRUCTION OF THE FASCISM (F) SCALE
1. The Underlying Theory; 2. The Formulation of Scale Items
C. RESULTS WITH SUCCESSIVE FORMS OF THE F SCALE
1. Statistical Properties of the Preliminary Scale (Form 78); 2. Item Analysis and Revision of the Preliminary Scale; 3. The Second F Scale: Form 60; 4. The Third F Scale: Forms 45 and 40
D. CORRELATIONS OF THE F SCALE WITH E AND WITH PEC
E. DIFFERENCES IN MEAN F-SCALE SCORE AMONG VARIOUS GROUPS
F. VALIDATION BY CASE STUDIES: THE F-SCALE RESPONSES OF MACK AND LARRY
G. CONCLUSION
VIII.ETHNOCENTRISM IN RELATION TO INTELLIGENCE AND EDUCATION-Daniel J. Levinson
PART II
PERSONALITY AS REVEALED THROUGH CLINICAL INTERVIEWS
IX.THE INTERVIEWS AS AN APPROACH TO THE PREJUDICED PERSONALITY-Else Frenkel-Brunswik
A. INTRODUCTION: COMPARISON OF GROUPS
B. SELECTION OF SUBJECTS FOR THE INTERVIEWS
1. Basis of Selection; 2. Representativeness of the Interviewees; 3. Approaching the Interviewees
C. THE INTERVIEWERS
D. SCOPE AND TECHNIQUE OF THE INTERVIEW
1. General Plan for the Interview; 2. “Underlying” and “Manifest” Questions; 3. General Instructions to the Interviewers
E. THE INTERVIEW SCHEDULE
1. Vocation; 2. Income; 3. Religion; 4. Clinical Data; 5. Politics; 6. Minorities and “Race”
F. THE SCORING OF THE INTERVIEWS
1. Quantification of Interview Data; 2. Broad Outline of Categories in the Interview Scoring Manual; 3. The Interview Rating Procedure and the Raters; 4. Reliability of the Interview Ratings; 5. Minimizing Halo-Effects in Rating the Interviews; 6. Tabulation of Interview Ratings by Categories: Statistical Significance
X.PARENTS AND CHILDHOOD AS SEEN THROUGH THE INTERVIEWS-Else Frenkel-Brunswik
A. INTRODUCTION
B. ATTITUDES TOWARD PARENTS AND CONCEPTION OF THE FAMILY
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Idealization vs. Objective Appraisal of Parents; 3. Genuineness of Affect; 4. Feelings of Victimization; 5. Submission vs. Principled Independence; 6. Dependence for Things vs. Dependence for Love; 7. Ingroup Orientation to the Family
C. CONCEPTIONS OF CHILDHOOD ENVIRONMENT
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Image of the Father in Men: Distant and Stern vs. Relaxed and Mild; 3. Image of the Father in Women: The Role of Provider; 4. Image of the Mother: Sacrifice, Moralism, Restrictiveness; 5. Parental Conflict; 6. Father-Dominated vs. Mother-Oriented Home; 7. Discipline: Harsh Application of Rules vs. Assimilation of Principles
D. CHILDHOOD EVENTS AND ATTITUDES TOWARD SIBLINGS
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Attitudes Toward Siblings; 3. Childhood Events; 4. Status Concern
E. SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS ON FAMILY PATTERNS
XI.SEX, PEOPLE, AND SELF AS SEEN THROUGH THE INTERVIEWS-Else Frenkel-Brunswik
A. ATTITUDE TOWARD SEX
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Status via Sex; 3. Moralistic Rejection of Instinctual Tendencies; 4. “Pure” vs. “Bad” Women; 5. Ego-Alien Ambivalence vs. “Fondness”; 6. Exploitive Manipulation for Power; 7. Conventionality vs. Individualism; 8. Summary
B. ATTITUDE TOWARD PEOPLE
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Moralistic Condemnation vs. Permissiveness; 3. Extrapunitiveness; 4. World as Jungle; 5. Hierarchical vs. Equalitarian Conception of Human Relations; 6. Dependence for Things; 7. Manipulation vs. Libidinization of People and Genuine Work Adjustment; 8. Social Status vs. Intrinsic Worth in Friendship; 9. Summary
C. ATTITUDE TOWARD PRESENT SELF
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Self-Glorification vs. Objective Appraisal; 3. Masculinity and Femininity; 4. Conventionalism and Moralism; 5. Conformity of Self and Ideal; 6. Denial of Sociopsychological Causation; 7. Property as Extension of Self
D. CONCEPTION OF CHILDHOOD SELF
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. “Difficult” Child; 3. Blandness vs. Adult-Orientation; 4. Contrasting Picture of Childhood and Present; 5. Summary of Attitude Toward Present Self and Childhood Self
XII.DYNAMIC AND COGNITIVE PERSONALITY ORGANIZATION AS SEEN THROUGH THE INTERVIEWS—Else Frenkel-Brunswik
A. DYNAMIC CHARACTER STRUCTURE
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Results; 2. Orality and Anality; 3. Dependence; 4. Aggression; 5. Ambivalence; 6. Identification; 7. Superego; 8. Strength of the Ego; 9. Distortion of Reality; 10. Physical Symptoms
B. COGNITIVE PERSONALITY ORGANIZATION
1. Definition of Rating Categories and Quantitative Resuits
2. Rigidity; 3. Negative Attitude Toward Science. Superstition; 4. Anti-Intraceptiveness and Autism; 5. Suggestibility
XIII.COMPREHENSIVE SCORES AND SUMMARY OF INTERVIEW RESULTS-Else Frenkel-Brunswik
A. THE DISCRIMINATORY POWERS OF THE MAJOR AREAS STUDIED
1. Verification of Anticipated Trend by Categories; 2. Composite Ratings for Seven Major Areas
B. VALITITY OF OVER-ALL SCORES AND RATINGS OF THE INTERVIEWS
1. Individual Composite Score Based on All Areas of Rating; 2. Over-all Intuitive Rating and Its Agreement with the Composite Score; 3. Agreement with the Questionnaire Results
C. SUMMARY OF THE PERSONALITY PATTERNS DERIVED FROM THE INTERVIEWS
1. Introduction; 2. Repression vs. Awareness; 3. Externalization vs. Internalization; 4. Conventionalism vs. Genuineness; 5. Power vs. Love-Orientation; 6. Rigidity vs. Flexibility. Problems of Adjustment; 7. Some Genetic Aspects; 8. Cultural Outlook
PART III
PERSONALITY AS REVEALED THROUGH PROJECTIVE MATERIAL
XIV.THE THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST IN THE STUDY OF PREJUDICED AND UNPREJUDICED INDIVIDUALS-Betty Aron
A. TESTING PROCEDURE
1. The Sample Tested; 2. Technique of Administration; 3. The Pictures Used
B. METHOD OF ANALYSIS OF THE STORY PROTOCOLS
1. The Murray-Sanford Scheme; 2. Thematic Analysis
C. THE T.A.T.S OF MACK AND LARRY
1. Larry’s Stories; 2. Mack’s Stories; 3. Analysis of the Stories
D. SUMMARY
XV.PROJECTIVE QUESTIONS IN THE STUDY OF PERSONALITY AND IDEOLOGY-Daniel J. Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. QUANTIFICATION BY MEANS OF SCORING CATEGORIES
C. SCORING MANUAL: CATEGORIES OF PROJECTIVE QUESTION RESPONSE
D. RESULTS
1. Reliability of Scoring; 2. Projective Question Scores in Relation to Standing on the E Scale; 3. Validation by Means of Case Studies: Mack and Larry
E. CONCLUSIONS
1. General Ego Functioning; 2. Specific Properties of the Ego; 3. Achievement Values vs. Conventional Values; 4. The Handling of Dependency as an Underlying Trend; 5. The Handling of Other Trends
PART IV
QUALITATIVE STUDIES OF IDEOLOGY
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS
XVI.PREJUDICE IN THE INTERVIEW MATERIAL-T. W. Adorno
A. INTRODUCTION
B. THE “FUNCTIONAL” CHARACTER OF ANTI-SEMITISM
C. THE IMAGINARY FOE
D. ANTI-SEMITISM FOR WHAT?
E. TWO KINDS OF JEWS
F. THE ANTI-SEMITE’S DILEMMA
G. PROSECUTOR AS JUDGE
H. THE MISFIT BOURGEOIS
I. OBSERVATIONS ON LOW-SCORING SUBJECTS
J. CONCLUSION
XVII.POLITICS AND ECONOMICS IN THE INTERVIEW MATERIAL-T. W. Adorno
A. INTRODUCTION
B. FORMAL CONSTITUENTS OF POLITICAL THINKING
1. Ignorance and Confusion; 2. Ticket Thinking and Personalization in Politics; 3. Surface Ideology and Real Opinion; 4. Pseudoconservatism; 5. The Usurpation Complex; 6. F.D.R.; 7. Bureaucrats and Politicians; 8. There Will Be No Utopia; 9. No Pity for the Poor; 10. Education Instead of Social Change
C. SOME POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC TOPICS
1. Unions; 2. Business and Government; 3. Political Issues Close to the Subjects; 4. Foreign Policy and Russia; 5. Communism
XVIII.SOME ASPECTS OF RELIGIOUS IDEOLOGY AS REVEALED IN THE INTERVIEW MATERIAL-T. W. Adorno
A. INTRODUCTION
B. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
C. SPECIFIC ISSUES
1. The Function of Religion in High and Low Scorers; 2. Belief in God, Disbelief in Immortality; 3. The Irreligious Low Scorer; 4. Religious Low Scorers
XIX.TYPES AND SYNDROMES-T. W. Adorno
A. THE APPROACH
B. SYNDROMES FOUND AMONG HIGH SCORERS
1. Surface Resentment; 2. The “Conventional” Syndrome; 3. The “Authoritarian” Syndrome; 4. The Rebel and the Psychopath; 5. The Crank; 6. The “Manipulative” Type
C. SYNDROMES FOUND AMONG LOW SCORERS
1. The “Rigid” Low Scorer; 2. The “Protesting” Low Scorer; 3. The “Impulsive” Low Scorer; 4. The “Easy-Going” Low Scorer; 5. The Genuine Liberal
PART V
APPLICATIONS TO INDIVIDUALS AND TO SPECIAL GROUPS
XX.GENETIC ASPECTS OF THE AUTHORITARIAN PERSONALITY: CASE STUDIES OF TWO CONTRASTING INDIVIDUALS-R. Nevitt Sanford
A. INTRODUCTION
B. THE CASE OF MACK
1. Environmental Forces and Events; 2. Deeper Personality Needs; 3. Dynamics of Surface Behavior and Attitudes
C. THE CONTRASTING CASE OF LARRY
XXI.CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRATIC TRENDS: A STUDY OF PRISON INMATES—William R. Morrow
A. INTRODUCTION
1. The Problem; 2. Sampling and Administration; 3. Plan of Discussion
B. ETHNOCENTRISM
1. General Questionnaire Statistics and Their Significance; 2. Ideology Concerning Negroes: A Submerged Outgroup; 3. Ideology Concerning Jews: A Supposed “Dominant” Outgroup
C. POLITICO-ECONOMIC ATTITUDES
D. MORALS AND RELIGION
E. DEFENSES AGAINST WEAKNESS
F. HETEROSEXUALITY
G. ANTI-INTRACEPTIVENESS AND CHILDHOOD
H. ATTITUDES TO PARENTS
I. “CRIMINALITY” IN HIGH AND LOW SCORERS
XXII.PSYCHOLOGICAL ILL HEALTH IN RELATION TO POTENTIAL FASCISM: A STUDY OF PSYCHIATRIC CLINIC PATIENTS—Maria Hertz Levinson
A. INTRODUCTION
B. THE NATURE OF THE SAMPLE
C. STATISTICAL RESULTS FROM THE QUESTIONNAIRE
D. RELATIONSHIP OF ETHNOCENTRISM TO VARIOUS PSYCHIATRIC CLASSIFICATIONS
1. Ethnocentrism in Relation to Neurosis and Psychosis; 2. Ethnocentrism in Relation to Specific Diagnostic Categories
E. ETHNOCENTRISM IN RELATION TO THE MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PERSONALITY INVENTORY
F. PERSONALITY TRENDS AS REVEALED BY PATIENTS’ “STATEMENT OF PROBLEM” IN THE FIRST PSYCHIATRIC INTERVIEW
1. Selection of Material; 2. The Scoring Manual: Description of Variables; 3. The Method of Quantification; 4. The Reliability of the Measures; 5. Relationship Between Ratings and Ethnocentrism Score; 6. Summary
G. CLINICAL PICTURES AND PERSONALITIES OF HIGH AND LOW SCORERS
1. The High Scorers
2. The Low Scorers; 3. The “Middles”
H. CONCLUSIONS
XXIII.CONCLUSIONS
NOTES
REFERENCES
INDEX