TY - JOUR
T1 - Heroes and villains
T2 - Motivated projection of political identities
AU - Turnbull-Dugarte, Stuart J.
AU - Wagner, Markus
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of EPS Academic Ltd.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Most research on political identities studies how individuals react to knowing others' political allegiances. However, in most contexts, political views and identities are hidden and only inferred, so that projected beliefs and identities may matter as much as actual ones. We argue that individuals engage in motivated political projection: the identities people project onto target individuals are strongly conditional on the valence of that target. We test this theoretical proposition in two pre-registered experimental studies. In Study 1, we rely on a unique visual conjoint experiment in Britain and the USA that asks participants to assign partisanship and political ideology to heroes and villains from film and fiction. In Study 2, we present British voters with a vignette that manipulates a subject's valence and solicits (false) recall information related to the subject's political identity. We find strong support for motivated political projection in both studies, especially among strong identifiers. This is largely driven by negative out-group counter-projection rather than positive in-group projection. As political projection can lead to the solidification of antagonistic political identities, our findings are relevant for understanding dynamics in group-based animosity and affective polarization.
AB - Most research on political identities studies how individuals react to knowing others' political allegiances. However, in most contexts, political views and identities are hidden and only inferred, so that projected beliefs and identities may matter as much as actual ones. We argue that individuals engage in motivated political projection: the identities people project onto target individuals are strongly conditional on the valence of that target. We test this theoretical proposition in two pre-registered experimental studies. In Study 1, we rely on a unique visual conjoint experiment in Britain and the USA that asks participants to assign partisanship and political ideology to heroes and villains from film and fiction. In Study 2, we present British voters with a vignette that manipulates a subject's valence and solicits (false) recall information related to the subject's political identity. We find strong support for motivated political projection in both studies, especially among strong identifiers. This is largely driven by negative out-group counter-projection rather than positive in-group projection. As political projection can lead to the solidification of antagonistic political identities, our findings are relevant for understanding dynamics in group-based animosity and affective polarization.
KW - affective polarisation
KW - conjoint experiment
KW - counter projection
KW - out-group animosity
KW - partisan identities
KW - social projection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001443304&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/psrm.2025.10
DO - 10.1017/psrm.2025.10
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001443304
SN - 2049-8470
JO - Political Science Research and Methods
JF - Political Science Research and Methods
ER -