TY - JOUR
T1 - Days of future past
T2 - concerns for the group's future prompt longing for its past (and ways to reclaim it)
AU - Wohl, Michael J. A.
AU - Stefaniak, Anna
AU - Smeekes, Anouk
N1 - Funding information: Preparation of this article was supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant to M. J. A. Wohl and A. Smeekes.
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - In this article, we summarize recent research on collective angst (i.e., concern for one's group's future vitality) and collective nostalgia (i.e., sentimental longing for the in-group's past) and emphasize their interconnections and predictive utility. We also put forth the supposition that the source of the collective angst that group members are feeling can influence the content of collective nostalgia (i.e., what group members are longing for), which has consequences for the attitudes and actions that group members will support to protect the group's vitality. Political rhetoric tends to capitalize on the relation between these emotions by making specific existential threats salient to elicit specific associated collective nostalgizing, followed by promises to "bring back the good old days"-days when the source of the threat was (ostensibly) absent. In sum, the content of collective nostalgia matters for understanding what action tendencies group members will support to assuage the specific (perceived) threats to their group.
AB - In this article, we summarize recent research on collective angst (i.e., concern for one's group's future vitality) and collective nostalgia (i.e., sentimental longing for the in-group's past) and emphasize their interconnections and predictive utility. We also put forth the supposition that the source of the collective angst that group members are feeling can influence the content of collective nostalgia (i.e., what group members are longing for), which has consequences for the attitudes and actions that group members will support to protect the group's vitality. Political rhetoric tends to capitalize on the relation between these emotions by making specific existential threats salient to elicit specific associated collective nostalgizing, followed by promises to "bring back the good old days"-days when the source of the threat was (ostensibly) absent. In sum, the content of collective nostalgia matters for understanding what action tendencies group members will support to assuage the specific (perceived) threats to their group.
KW - Group-based emotions
KW - Collective nostalgia
KW - Collective angst
KW - Populism
KW - Memory
KW - Political psychology
U2 - 10.1177/0963721420924766
DO - 10.1177/0963721420924766
M3 - Article
SN - 0963-7214
VL - 29
SP - 481
EP - 486
JO - Current Directions in Psychological Science
JF - Current Directions in Psychological Science
IS - 5
M1 - 0963721420924766
ER -