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Paper Title

Bless her heart: Gossip phrased with concern provides advantages in female intrasexual competition

Authors

Roy F. Baumeister
Roy F. Baumeister
Tania A. Reynolds
Tania A. Reynolds
Jon K. Maner
Jon K. Maner

Keywords

  • Gossip
  • Intrasexual Competition
  • Concerned Gossip
  • Female Friendships
  • Reputational Harm
  • Social Competition
  • Self-Deception
  • Romantic Prospects
  • Trustworthiness
  • Social Desirability
  • Negative Gossip
  • Female Social Dynamics
  • Malicious Gossip
  • Female Gossip Strategies
  • Interpersonal Relationships
  • Gossip Motivations

Article Type

Research Article

Journal

Journal:Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 1096-0465

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 116 | Page No : 104670

Published On

January, 2025

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Abstract

Although many women report being victimized by gossip, fewer report spreading negative gossip. Female gossipers might be unaware they are gossiping if they disclose such statements out of concern for targets. Four studies (N = 1709) investigated whether women believe their gossip is motivated by concern and whether expressing concern for targets insulates female gossipers against social costs, while simultaneously impairing targets' reputations. Study 1 examined sex differences in gossip motivations. Compared to men, women endorsed stronger concern than harm motivations, especially when gossiping about other women, suggesting these motivations characterize female intrasexual gossip. In Study 2, female gossipers who phrased their negative gossip with concern (versus maliciously or neutrally) were evaluated as more trustworthy and desirable as social and romantic partners. Study 3 replicated the favorable evaluations of concerned female gossipers. Female participants especially disliked malicious female gossipers, suggesting professions of concern might help to avoid women's scorn. Male participants reported lower romantic interest in female gossip targets when they learned concern (versus malicious or no) gossip, suggesting concerned gossip can harm female targets' romantic prospects. Study 4 revealed these patterns extend to face-to-face interactions. A female gossiper was preferred as a social partner when she phrased her gossip with concern versus maliciously. Moreover, concerned gossip harmed perceptions of the female target as effectively as malicious gossip. Altogether, findings suggest that negative gossip delivered with concern effectively harms female targets' reputations, while also protecting gossipers' reputations, indicating a viable strategy in female intrasexual competition.

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