Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow

Culture fusion reflects blending of elements from distinct cultures that produces a novel, hybrid cultural representation. Prior research among participants in the USA revealed that fusion of cultural elements from the USA and China could be perceived as contamination of one’s local culture and evok...

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Main Authors: Cheon, Bobby K., Hong, Ying-yi
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154547
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1545472021-12-28T03:31:07Z Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow Cheon, Bobby K. Hong, Ying-yi School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Culture Mixing Culture Fusion Culture fusion reflects blending of elements from distinct cultures that produces a novel, hybrid cultural representation. Prior research among participants in the USA revealed that fusion of cultural elements from the USA and China could be perceived as contamination of one’s local culture and evokes disgust. It remains unknown whether this aversion to culture fusion generalizes to other samples and is contingent on perceivers’ attitudes toward the source of the foreign culture. Here, we tested these questions across two studies. Participants were exposed to different patterns of culture mixing of their own local culture and two foreign cultures (one relatively favored and one relatively disfavored). Across both studies (Singaporean participants in Study 1 and Hong Kong participants in Study 2), the results replicated prior findings suggesting that culture fusion elicits stronger negative evaluations (e.g., disgust, discomfort) compared to other patterns of culture mixing (i.e., presentation of local and foreign elements side-by-side). Importantly, a Mixing Type × Foreign Source interaction emerged, such that participants in both studies reacted more negatively to culture mixing involving a less favored (China) than a more favored (USA) culture, with negative reactions especially pronounced toward culture fusion. This aversive response was moderated by patriotism in Singapore but not in Hong Kong. These findings demonstrate that response to culture mixing depends on intergroup attitudes toward foreign cultures, and culture fusion is especially aversive when involving cultural inflows from a disfavored out-group. The contribution of geopolitical differences between Singapore and Hong Kong on these findings are also considered. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Nanyang Technological University The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This research and preparation of this manuscript was supported by Nanyang Assistant Professorship (NAP) Award Grant (M4081643.SS0) awarded to Bobby Cheon, a General Research Fund (Reference Number 14655416) of the Research Grant Council of Hong Kong SAR government awarded to Ying-yi Hong, and by A*STAR under its IAF-PP Food Structure Engineering for Nutrition and Health Programme (Grant ID Number H17/01/a0/A11 & H18/01/a0/B11). 2021-12-28T03:31:07Z 2021-12-28T03:31:07Z 2020 Journal Article Cheon, B. K. & Hong, Y. (2020). Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 51(5), 370-386. https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022022120919994 0022-0221 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154547 10.1177/0022022120919994 2-s2.0-85085179671 5 51 370 386 en M4081643.SS0 H17/01/a0/A11 H18/01/a0/B11 Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology © The Author(s) 2020. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Culture Mixing
Culture Fusion
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Culture Mixing
Culture Fusion
Cheon, Bobby K.
Hong, Ying-yi
Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
description Culture fusion reflects blending of elements from distinct cultures that produces a novel, hybrid cultural representation. Prior research among participants in the USA revealed that fusion of cultural elements from the USA and China could be perceived as contamination of one’s local culture and evokes disgust. It remains unknown whether this aversion to culture fusion generalizes to other samples and is contingent on perceivers’ attitudes toward the source of the foreign culture. Here, we tested these questions across two studies. Participants were exposed to different patterns of culture mixing of their own local culture and two foreign cultures (one relatively favored and one relatively disfavored). Across both studies (Singaporean participants in Study 1 and Hong Kong participants in Study 2), the results replicated prior findings suggesting that culture fusion elicits stronger negative evaluations (e.g., disgust, discomfort) compared to other patterns of culture mixing (i.e., presentation of local and foreign elements side-by-side). Importantly, a Mixing Type × Foreign Source interaction emerged, such that participants in both studies reacted more negatively to culture mixing involving a less favored (China) than a more favored (USA) culture, with negative reactions especially pronounced toward culture fusion. This aversive response was moderated by patriotism in Singapore but not in Hong Kong. These findings demonstrate that response to culture mixing depends on intergroup attitudes toward foreign cultures, and culture fusion is especially aversive when involving cultural inflows from a disfavored out-group. The contribution of geopolitical differences between Singapore and Hong Kong on these findings are also considered.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Cheon, Bobby K.
Hong, Ying-yi
format Article
author Cheon, Bobby K.
Hong, Ying-yi
author_sort Cheon, Bobby K.
title Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
title_short Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
title_full Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
title_fullStr Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
title_full_unstemmed Aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
title_sort aversive response towards culture fusion is moderated by the source of foreign cultural inflow
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154547
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