Recent research has conceptualized adherence to masculine honor ideology as an
individual difference in one’s endorsement of MHB, suggesting men and women from
nonhonor cultures may also endorse masculine honor ideology (e.g., Barnes et al., 2012;
Saucier & McManus, 2014; Saucier et al., 2016). Influenced by previous honor research,
Saucier et al. (2016) developed the Masculine Honor Beliefs Scale (MHBS) to measure
seven facets (e.g., pride in manhood and provocation) representing MHB. MHB explain
regional differences in honor-related responses to provocation (see Saucier, Miller, et al.,
2018). Furthermore, the MHBS has been used to examine relationships between
adherence to MHB and various attitudes and perceptions of social behaviors, such as
perceptions of the world being a “competitive jungle” (Saucier, Webster, et al., 2018),
men’s motivations for muscularity (Saucier, O’Dea, & Stratmoen, 2017), perceptions of
slurs against men’s masculinity as insulting and deserving of retaliatory aggression
(Saucier, Till, Miller, O’Dea, & Andres, 2015), expectations for men to physically
confront honor threats (O’Dea, Chalman, Castro Bueno, & Saucier, 2018), and negative
perceptions of those who do not (O’Dea, Bueno, & Saucier, 2017). MHB are associated
with various political attitudes, including greater endorsement of agentic male candidates for President of the U.S. (Martens, Stratmoen, & Saucier, 2018), negative perceptions of football players who knelt during the National Anthem to protest police
violence against racial minorities (Stratmoen, Lawless, & Saucier, 2018), and greater
support for restrictive national security policies and endorsement of war (Saucier,
Webster, et al., 2018). Furthermore, MHB are associated with negative perceptions of
rape survivors and increased support for punishment for rapists (Saucier, Strain, Hockett,
& McManus, 2015), as well as with perceptions of romantic rejection as threatening
men’s honor and consequently expecting increased aggression by men toward women
who reject their romantic advances (Stratmoen, Greer, Martens, & Saucier, 2018).
Source is this paper: Stratmoen, E., Rivera, E. D., & Saucier, D. A. (2019). “Sorry, I already have a boyfriend”: Masculine honor beliefs and perceptions of women’s use of deceptive rejection behaviors to avert unwanted romantic advances. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 0265407519865615.
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