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What Accounts for Heterosexual Women’s Negative Emotional Responses to Lesbians?: Examination of Traditional Gender Role Beliefs and Sexual Prejudice

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Abstract

This study examined a pathway to heterosexual women’s experience of anger and anxiety in response to lesbian interactions. Participants were 149 18–30 year old heterosexual female undergraduates (56% African American) from a southeastern United States university. Participants completed measures of female gender role beliefs, sexual prejudice, and state affect, viewed a video depicting relationship behavior between a female–female or male–female dyad, and again completed a measure of state affect. Results indicated that traditional beliefs about women were associated with higher levels of sexual prejudice toward lesbians. In turn, higher levels of sexual prejudice predicted increased anger (not anxiety) in response to the female–female, but not the male–female, dyad. Findings elucidate determinants of heterosexual women’s anger, and potentially aggression, toward lesbians.

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Correspondence to Dominic J. Parrott.

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This research was supported by grant R01-AA-015445 from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. We thank Bronwyn Dowling and Lauren Walther for their assistance with data collection.

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Parrott, D.J., Gallagher, K.E. What Accounts for Heterosexual Women’s Negative Emotional Responses to Lesbians?: Examination of Traditional Gender Role Beliefs and Sexual Prejudice. Sex Roles 59, 229–239 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11199-008-9436-0

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11199-008-9436-0

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