Germany’s past is marked not only by the atrocities of the Holocaust, but also by a history of collective attempts to come to terms with these crimes. The present paper focuses on the previously rarely explored consequences of perceived success in dealing with a perpetrator past for the moral ingroup-image and the demand for an end to the discussion of this chapter of history (i.e., demand for historical closure). In one correlational study (N = 982) and three experimental studies (N = 904), we found robust evidence for a positive association between perceived success in dealing with the Nazi past and perceived ingroup morality. The results on the assumed influence of success on claims for historical closure, mediated by morality, were only...
Previous discussions of the Frankfurt School’s work on Judeophobia have almost entirely neglected th...
Philosophers, historians, and social scientists often suppose that our moral judgments are insulated...
The paper proposes the idea that clarity of historical narratives meant for descendents of groups th...
Kazarovytska F, Kretzschmar M, Lamberty P, Rees J, Knausenberger J, Imhoff R. From Moral Disaster to...
The role of “bystanders” has been a central theme in discussions about the ethical legacy of the Hol...
This article builds on a research thesis that confronting moral feelings is essential to an understa...
Scholars of the Third Reich have recently begun to study the ethical standards of National Socialist...
Relegating past in-group transgressions to ancient history might deflect threat to collective identi...
abstract: After the First World War, citizens, soldiers, and political figures alike thought they ha...
Papendick M, Rees J, Zick A. Lessons From the Past? Distorted Perspectives on Germans' Involvement D...
This article is based on the assumption that core concepts of National Socialism—different from Marx...
The current thesis aimed to extend existing research on intergroup forgiveness by considering histor...
This article examines the consequences of different representations of the Holocaust for intergroup ...
In-group identification is necessary for in-group members to take responsibility for the past transg...
This study was aimed at testing if exposure to a narrative about a heroic helper,can increment respo...
Previous discussions of the Frankfurt School’s work on Judeophobia have almost entirely neglected th...
Philosophers, historians, and social scientists often suppose that our moral judgments are insulated...
The paper proposes the idea that clarity of historical narratives meant for descendents of groups th...
Kazarovytska F, Kretzschmar M, Lamberty P, Rees J, Knausenberger J, Imhoff R. From Moral Disaster to...
The role of “bystanders” has been a central theme in discussions about the ethical legacy of the Hol...
This article builds on a research thesis that confronting moral feelings is essential to an understa...
Scholars of the Third Reich have recently begun to study the ethical standards of National Socialist...
Relegating past in-group transgressions to ancient history might deflect threat to collective identi...
abstract: After the First World War, citizens, soldiers, and political figures alike thought they ha...
Papendick M, Rees J, Zick A. Lessons From the Past? Distorted Perspectives on Germans' Involvement D...
This article is based on the assumption that core concepts of National Socialism—different from Marx...
The current thesis aimed to extend existing research on intergroup forgiveness by considering histor...
This article examines the consequences of different representations of the Holocaust for intergroup ...
In-group identification is necessary for in-group members to take responsibility for the past transg...
This study was aimed at testing if exposure to a narrative about a heroic helper,can increment respo...
Previous discussions of the Frankfurt School’s work on Judeophobia have almost entirely neglected th...
Philosophers, historians, and social scientists often suppose that our moral judgments are insulated...
The paper proposes the idea that clarity of historical narratives meant for descendents of groups th...