Just as established groups, as a matter of course, regard their superior power as a sign of their higher human value, so outsider groups, as long as the power differential is great and submission inescapable, emotionally experience their power inferiority... The Established and the Outsiders - Page xxviby Norbert Elias, John L Scotson - 1994 - 199 pagesFull view - About this book
 | Engin Fahri Isin - Social Science - 2002 - 335 pages
...dominant group attributes to it. It is almost as if power is most effective when it conceals itself. "Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...power inferiority as a sign of human inferiority" (xxvi). Elias gives special emphasis to duration as a source of the cohesion and integration of groups.... | |
 | Farhad Dalal - Psychology - 2002 - 251 pages
...enter the minds of those who inhabit this social space to become part of their psyches and emotions. Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...power inferiority as a sign of human inferiority. (ibid. xxvi, italics original, underlining added) And it is also the case that the differential appears... | |
 | Engin Fahri Isin - Social Science - 2002 - 335 pages
...dominant group attributes to it. It is almost as if power is most effective when it conceals itself. “Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...power inferiority as a sign of human inferiority” (xxvi). Elias gives special emphasis to duration as a source of the cohesion and integration of groups.... | |
 | Farhad Dalal - Psychology - 2002 - 251 pages
...enter the minds of those who inhabit this social space to become part of their psyches and emotions. Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...power inferiority as a sign of human inferiority. (ibid. xxvi, italics original, underlining added) And it is also the case that the differential appears... | |
 | Farhad Dalal - Psychology - 2002 - 251 pages
...enter the minds of those who inhabit this social space to become part of their psyches and emotions. Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...power inferiority as a sign of human inferiority. (ibid. xxvi, italics original, underlining added) And it is also the case that the differential appears... | |
 | Steven Loyal, Stephen Quilley - Social Science - 2004 - 289 pages
...yardstick of their oppressors. In terms of their oppressors' norms they find themselves wanting . . . Just as established groups, as a matter of course,...higher human value, so outsider groups, as long as their power differential is great and submission inescapable, emotionally experience their power inferiority... | |
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