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Let's Talk About Race, Baby! When Whites' and Blacks' Interracial Contact Experiences Diverge.


ABSTRACT: The present study investigated whether the conditions that make interracial contact anxiety-provoking for Whites differ from those that make it anxiety-provoking for Blacks. Specifically, the present work examined interracial anxiety as a function of discussant race (i.e., White or Black) and discussion topic (i.e., race-related or race-neutral). To that end, we examined the non-verbal behavior of White and Black participants during brief interpersonal interactions. Consistent with previous research, White participants behaved more anxiously during interracial than same-race interactions. Additionally, White participants of interracial interaction behaved more anxiously than their Black interaction partners. Furthermore, whereas White participants of interracial interactions found race-related discussions no more stressful than race-neutral discussions, Black participants of interracial interactions found race-related discussions less stressful than race-neutral discussions. The implications of these racial and contextual differences in interracial anxiety for improving interracial contact and race relations, more broadly, are discussed.

SUBMITTER: Trawalter S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2493421 | biostudies-literature | 2008 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Let's Talk About Race, Baby! When Whites' and Blacks' Interracial Contact Experiences Diverge.

Trawalter Sophie S   Richeson Jennifer A JA  

Journal of experimental social psychology 20080701 4


The present study investigated whether the conditions that make interracial contact anxiety-provoking for Whites differ from those that make it anxiety-provoking for Blacks. Specifically, the present work examined interracial anxiety as a function of discussant race (i.e., White or Black) and discussion topic (i.e., race-related or race-neutral). To that end, we examined the non-verbal behavior of White and Black participants during brief interpersonal interactions. Consistent with previous rese  ...[more]

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