Go Back Research Article March, 2009

Terror management theory and self-esteem revisited: The roles of implicit and explicit self-esteem in mortality salience effects

Abstract

Three studies tested the roles of implicit and/or explicit self-esteem in reactions to mortality salience. In Study 1, writing about death versus a control topic increased worldview defense among participants low in implicit self-esteem but not among those high in implicit self-esteem. In Study 2, a manipulation to boost implicit self-esteem reduced the effect of mortality salience on worldview defense. In Study 3, mortality salience increased the endorsement of positive personality descriptions but only among participants with the combination of low implicit and high explicit self-esteem. These findings indicate that high implicit self-esteem confers resilience against the psychological threat of death, and therefore the findings provide direct support for a fundamental tenet of terror management theory regarding the anxiety-buffering role of self-esteem.

Keywords

Terror Management Theory Self-Esteem Implicit Self-Esteem Explicit Self-Esteem Mortality Salience Worldview Defense Psychological Threat Anxiety Buffering Personality Descriptions Death Awareness Implicit-Explicit Self-Esteem Interaction Resilience Psychological Defense Self-Esteem Manipulation Anxiety Management
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Volume 96
Issue 5
Pages 1077–1087
ISSN 1939-1315
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