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Power and revenge.


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Authors

Strelan, Peter 
Weick, Mario 

Abstract

We took an individual differences approach to explain revenge tendencies in powerholders. Across four experimental studies, chronically powerless individuals sought more revenge than chronically powerful individuals following a high power episode (Studies 1 and 2), when striking a powerful pose (Study 3), and when making a powerful hand gesture (Study 4). This relationship vanished when participants were not exposed to incidental power. A meta-analysis revealed that, relative to a lack of power or a neutral context, exposure to incidental power increased vengeance among the chronically powerless and reduced vengeance among the chronically powerful. These findings add to previous research on relations between power and aggression, and underscore the role of individual differences as a determinant of powerholders' destructive responses.

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Keywords

body posture, dominance, gesture, power, revenge, Aggression, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Power, Psychological, Punishment, Social Perception

Journal Title

Br J Soc Psychol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0144-6665
2044-8309

Volume Title

53

Publisher

Wiley