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Wikipedia

Dehumanization

Dehumanization is the denial of full humanity in others along with the cruelty and suffering that accompany it.[1][2][3] A practical definition refers to it as the viewing and the treatment of other people as though they lack the mental capacities that are commonly attributed to human beings.[4] In this definition, every act or thought that regards a person as "less than" human is dehumanization.[5]

In his report on the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, Jürgen Stroop described Jews resisting deportation to Nazi camps as "bandits".
Lynndie England pulling a leash attached to the neck of a prisoner in Abu Ghraib prison, who is forced to crawl on the floor, while Megan Ambuhl watches

Dehumanization is one form of incitement to genocide.[6] It has also been used to justify war, judicial and extrajudicial killing, slavery, the confiscation of property, denial of suffrage and other rights, and to attack enemies or political opponents.

Conceptualizations edit

 
Slain Armenians in Erzurum as part of Hamidian massacre

Behaviorally, dehumanization describes a disposition towards others that debases the others' individuality by either portraying it as an "individual" species or by portraying it as an "individual" object (e.g., someone who acts inhumanely towards humans). As a process, dehumanization may be understood as the opposite of personification, a figure of speech in which inanimate objects or abstractions are endowed with human qualities; dehumanization then is the disendowment of these same qualities or a reduction to abstraction.[7]

In almost all contexts, dehumanization is used pejoratively along with a disruption of social norms, with the former applying to the actor(s) of behavioral dehumanization and the latter applying to the action(s) or processes of dehumanization. For instance, there is dehumanization for those who are perceived as lacking in culture or civility, which are concepts that are believed to distinguish humans from animals.[8] Social norms define humane behavior and reflexively define what is outside of humane behavior or inhumane. Dehumanization differs from inhumane behaviors or processes in its breadth to propose competing social norms. It is an action of dehumanization as the old norms are depreciated to the competing new norms, which then redefine the action of dehumanization. If the new norms lose acceptance, then the action remains one of dehumanization. The definition of dehumanization remains in a reflexive state of a type-token ambiguity relative to both individual and societal scales.

 
Two Imperial Japanese Army officers in occupied China who competed to see who could kill one hundred Chinese people with a sword first during the Nanjing Massacre

In biological terms, dehumanization can be described as an introduced species marginalizing the human species, or an introduced person/process that debases other people inhumanely.[9]

In political science and jurisprudence, the act of dehumanization is the inferential alienation of human rights or denaturalization of natural rights, a definition contingent upon presiding international law rather than social norms limited by human geography. In this context, a specialty within species does not need to constitute global citizenship or its inalienable rights; the human genome inherits both.

It is theorized that dehumanization takes on two forms: animalistic dehumanization, which is employed on a mostly intergroup basis; and mechanistic dehumanization, which is employed on a mostly interpersonal basis.[10] Dehumanization can occur discursively (e.g., idiomatic language that likens individual human beings to non-human animals, verbal abuse, erasing one's voice from discourse), symbolically (e.g., imagery), or physically (e.g., chattel slavery, physical abuse, refusing eye contact). Dehumanization often ignores the target's individuality (i.e., the creative and exciting aspects of their personality) and can hinder one from feeling empathy or correctly understanding a stigmatized group.[11]

Dehumanization may be carried out by a social institution (such as a state, school, or family), interpersonally, or even within oneself. Dehumanization can be unintentional, especially upon individuals, as with some types of de facto racism. State-organized dehumanization has historically been directed against perceived political, racial, ethnic, national, or religious minority groups. Other minoritized and marginalized individuals and groups (based on sexual orientation, gender, disability, class, or some other organizing principle) are also susceptible to various forms of dehumanization. The concept of dehumanization has received empirical attention in the psychological literature.[12][13] It is conceptually related to infrahumanization,[14] delegitimization,[15] moral exclusion,[16] and objectification.[17] Dehumanization occurs across several domains; it is facilitated by status, power, and social connection; and results in behaviors like exclusion, violence, and support for violence against others.

"Dehumanisation is viewed as a central component to intergroup violence because it is frequently the most important precursor to moral exclusion, the process by which stigmatized groups are placed outside the boundary in which moral values, rules, and considerations of fairness apply."[18]

David Livingstone Smith, director and founder of The Human Nature Project at the University of New England, argues that historically, human beings have been dehumanizing one another for thousands of years.[19] In his work "The Paradoxes of Dehumanization", Smith proposes that dehumanization simultaneously regards people as human and subhuman. This paradox comes to light, as Smith identifies, because the reason people are dehumanized is so their human attributes can be taken advantage of.[20]

Humanness edit

In Herbert Kelman's work on dehumanization, humanness has two features: "identity" (i.e., a perception of the person "as an individual, independent and distinguishable from others, capable of making choices") and "community" (i.e., a perception of the person as "part of an interconnected network of individuals who care for each other"). When a target's agency and embeddedness in a community are denied, they no longer elicit compassion or other moral responses and may suffer violence.[21]

Objectification edit

Psychologist Barbara Fredrickson and Tomi-Ann Roberts argued that the sexual objectification of women extends beyond pornography (which emphasizes women's bodies over their uniquely human mental and emotional characteristics) to society generally. There is a normative emphasis on female appearance that causes women to take a third-person perspective on their bodies.[22] The psychological distance women may feel from their bodies might cause them to dehumanize themselves. Some research has indicated that women and men exhibit a "sexual body part recognition bias", in which women's sexual body parts are better recognized when presented in isolation than in their entire bodies. In contrast, men's sexual body parts are better recognized in the context of their entire bodies than in isolation.[23] Men who dehumanize women as either animals or objects are more liable to rape and sexually harass women and display more negative attitudes toward female rape victims.[24]

Philosopher Martha Nussbaum identified seven components of sexual objectification: instrumentality, denial of autonomy, inertness, fungibility, violability, ownership, and denial of subjectivity.[25][further explanation needed]

In this context, instrumentality refers to when the objectified is used as an instrument to the objectifier's benefit. Denial of autonomy occurs in the form of the objectifier underestimating the objectified and denies their capabilities. In the case of inertness, the objectified is treated as if they are lazy and indolent. Fungibility brands the objectified to be easily replaceable. Volability is when the objectifier does not respect the objectified person's personal space or boundaries. Ownership is when the objectified is seen as another person's property. Lastly, the denial of subjectivity is a lack of sympathy for the objectified, or the dismissal of the notion that the objectified has feelings. These seven components cause the objectifier to view the objectified in a disrespectful way, therefore treating them so.[26]

History edit

Native Americans edit

 
Mass grave for the dead Lakota following the Wounded Knee massacre. Up to 300 Natives were killed, mostly old men, women, and children.[27]

Native Americans were dehumanized as "merciless Indian savages" in the United States Declaration of Independence.[28] Following the Wounded Knee massacre in December 1890, author L. Frank Baum wrote:[29]

The Pioneer has before declared that our only safety depends upon the total extermination [sic] of the Indians. Having wronged them for centuries we had better, in order to protect our civilization, follow it up by one more wrong and wipe these untamed and untamable creatures from the face of the earth. In this lies safety for our settlers and the soldiers who are under incompetent commands. Otherwise, we may expect future years to be as full of trouble with the redskins as those have been in the past.

In Martin Luther King Jr.'s book on civil rights, Why We Can't Wait, he wrote:[30][31][32]

Our nation was born in genocide when it embraced the doctrine that the original American, the Indian, was an inferior race. Even before there were large numbers of Negroes on our shores, the scar of racial hatred had already disfigured colonial society. From the sixteenth century forward, blood flowed in battles over racial supremacy. We are perhaps the only nation which tried as a matter of national policy to wipe out its indigenous population. Moreover, we elevated that tragic experience into a noble crusade. Indeed, even today we have not permitted ourselves to reject or to feel remorse for this shameful episode. Our literature, our films, our drama, our folklore all exalt it.

King was an active supporter of the Native American rights movement, which he drew parallels with his own leadership of the civil rights movement.[32] Both movements aimed to overturn dehumanizing attitudes held by members of the public at large against them.[33]

Causes and facilitating factors edit

 
Reproduction of a handbill advertising a slave auction, in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1769

Several lines of psychological research relate to the concept of dehumanization. Infrahumanization suggests that individuals think of and treat outgroup members as "less human" and more like animals;[14] while Austrian ethnologist Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt uses the term pseudo-speciation, a term that he borrowed from the psychoanalyst Erik Erikson, to imply that the dehumanized person or persons are regarded as not members of the human species.[34] Specifically, individuals associate secondary emotions (which are seen as uniquely human) more with the ingroup than with the outgroup. Primary emotions (those experienced by all sentient beings, whether human or other animals) are found to be more associated with the outgroup.[14] Dehumanization is intrinsically connected with violence.[35][36][37] Often, one cannot do serious injury to another without first dehumanizing him or her in one's mind (as a form of rationalization).[38] Military training is, among other things, systematic desensitization and dehumanization of the enemy, and military personnel may find it psychologically necessary to refer to the enemy as an animal or other non-human beings. Lt. Col. Dave Grossman has shown that without such desensitization it would be difficult, if not impossible, for one human to kill another human, even in combat or under threat to their own lives.[39]

 
Ota Benga, a human exhibit in Bronx Zoo, 1906

According to Daniel Bar-Tal, delegitimization is the "categorization of groups into extreme negative social categories which are excluded from human groups that are considered as acting within the limits of acceptable norms and values".[15]

Moral exclusion occurs when outgroups are subject to a different set of moral values, rules, and fairness than are used in social relations with ingroup members.[16] When individuals dehumanize others, they no longer experience distress when they treat them poorly. Moral exclusion is used to explain extreme behaviors like genocide, harsh immigration policies, and eugenics, but it can also happen on a more regular, everyday discriminatory level. In laboratory studies, people who are portrayed as lacking human qualities are treated in a particularly harsh and violent manner.[40][41][42][clarification needed]

Dehumanized perception occurs when a subject experiences low frequencies of activation within their social cognition neural network.[43] This includes areas of neural networking such as the superior temporal sulcus (STS) and the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC).[44] A 2001 study by psychologists Chris and Uta Frith suggests that the criticality of social interaction within a neural network has tendencies for subjects to dehumanize those seen as disgust-inducing, leading to social disengagement.[45] Tasks involving social cognition typically activate the neural network responsible for subjective projections of disgust-inducing perceptions and patterns of dehumanization. "Besides manipulations of target persons, manipulations of social goals validate this prediction: Inferring preference, a mental-state inference, significantly increases mPFC and STS activity to these otherwise dehumanized targets."[who said this?][46] A 2007 study by Harris, McClure, van den Bos, Cohen, and Fiske suggests that a person's choice to dehumanize another person is due to decreased neural activity towards the projected target. This decreased neural activity is identified as low medial prefrontal cortex activation, which is associated with perceiving social information.[incomprehensible][47]

While social distance from the outgroup target is a necessary condition for dehumanization, some research suggests that this alone is insufficient. Psychological research has identified high status, power, and social connection as additional factors. Members of high-status groups more often associate humanity with the ingroup than the outgroup, while members of low-status groups exhibit no differences in associations with humanity. Thus, having a high status makes one more likely to dehumanize others.[48] Low-status groups are more associated with human nature traits (e.g., warmth, emotionalism) than uniquely human characteristics, implying that they are closer to animals than humans because these traits are typical of humans but can be seen in other species.[49] In addition, another line of work found that individuals in a position of power were more likely to objectify their subordinates, treating them as a means to one's end rather than focusing on their essentially human qualities.[50] Finally, social connection—thinking about a close other or being in the actual presence of a close other—enables dehumanization by reducing the attribution of human mental states, increasing support for treating targets like animals, and increasing willingness to endorse harsh interrogation tactics.[51] This is counterintuitive because social connection has documented personal health and well-being benefits but appears to impair intergroup relations.

Neuroimaging studies have discovered that the medial prefrontal cortex—a brain region distinctively involved in attributing mental states to others—shows diminished activation to extremely dehumanized targets (i.e., those rated, according to the stereotype content model, as low-warmth and low-competence, such as drug addicts or homeless people).[52][53]

Race and ethnicity edit

 
American propaganda poster from World War II featuring a Japanese soldier depicted as a rat

Racist dehumanization entails that groups and individuals are understood as less than fully human by virtue of their race.[54]

Dehumanization often occurs as a result of intergroup conflict. Ethnic and racial others are often represented as animals in popular culture and scholarship. There is evidence that this representation persists in the American context with African Americans implicitly associated with apes. To the extent that an individual has this dehumanizing implicit association, they are more likely to support violence against African Americans (e.g., jury decisions to execute defendants).[55] Historically, dehumanization is frequently connected to genocidal conflicts in that ideologies before and during the conflict depict victims as subhuman (e.g., rodents).[10] Immigrants may also be dehumanized in this manner.[56]

 
Austrian propaganda poster made during World War I depicting a Serb as an ape-like terrorist

In 1901, the six Australian colonies assented to federation, creating the modern nation state of Australia and its government. Section 51 (xxvi) excluded Aboriginals from the groups protected by special laws, and section 127 excluded Aboriginals from population counts. The Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 categorically denied Aboriginals the right to vote. Indigenous Australians were not allowed the social security benefits (e.g., aged pensions and maternity allowances) which were provided to others. Aboriginals in rural areas were discriminated against and controlled as to where and how they could marry, work, live, and their movements.[57]

In the U.S., African Americans were dehumanized by being classified as non-human primates. A California police officer who was also involved in the Rodney King beating described a dispute between an American Black couple as "something right out of Gorillas in the Mist".[58] Franz Boas and Charles Darwin hypothesized that there might be an evolutionary process among primates. Monkeys and apes were least evolved, then savage and deformed anthropoids, which referred to people of African ancestry, to Caucasians as most developed.[59]

Language edit

Language has been used as an essential tool in the process of dehumanizing others.[60][61] Examples of dehumanizing language when referring to a person or group of people may include animal, cockroach, rat, vermin monster, ape, snake, infestation, parasite, alien, savage, and subhuman. Other examples can include racist, sexist, and other derogatory forms of language.[61] The use of dehumanizing language can influence others to view a targeted group as less human or less deserving of humane treatment.[60]

In Unit 731, an imperial Japanese biological and chemical warfare research facility, brutal experiments were conducted on humans who the researchers referred to as 'maruta' (丸太) meaning logs.[62][63] Yoshio Shinozuka, Japanese army medic who performed several vivisections in the facility said, "We called the victims 'logs.' We didn't want to think of them as people. We didn't want to admit that we were taking lives. So we convinced ourselves that what we were doing was like cutting down a tree."[64][63]

Words such as migrant, immigrant, and expatriate are assigned to foreigners based on their social status and wealth, rather than ability, achievements, or political alignment. Expatriate is a word to describe the privileged, often light-skinned people newly residing in an area and has connotations that suggest ability, wealth, and trust. Meanwhile, the word immigrant is used to describe people coming to a new location to reside and infers a much less-desirable meaning.[65]

The word "immigrant" is sometimes paired with "illegal", which harbors a profoundly derogatory connotation. Misuse of these terms—they are often used inaccurately—to describe the other, can alter the perception of a group as a whole in a negative way. Ryan Eller, the executive director of the immigrant advocacy group Define American, expressed the problem this way:[66]

It's not just because it's derogatory, but because it's factually incorrect. Most of the time when we hear [illegal immigrant] used, most of the time, the shorter version 'illegals' is being used as a noun, which implies that a human being is perpetually illegal. There is no other classification that I'm aware of where the individual is being rendered as unlawful as opposed to those individuals' actions.

A series of language examinations found a direct relation between homophobic epithets and social cognitive distancing towards a group of homosexuals, a form of dehumanization. These epithets (e.g., faggot) were thought to function as dehumanizing labels because they tended to act as markers of deviance. One pair of studies found that subjects were more likely to associate malignant language with homosexuals, and that such language associations increased the physical distancing between the subject and the homosexual. This indicated that the malignant language could encourage dehumanization, cognitive and physical distancing in ways that other forms of malignant language do not.[67] Another study involved a computational linguistic analysis of dehumanizing language regarding LGBTQ individuals and groups in the New York Times from 1986 to 2015.[68] The study used previous psychological research on dehuminization to identify four language categories: (1) negative evaluations of a target group, (2) denial of agency, (3) moral disgust, and (4) likening members of the target group to non-human entities (e.g., machines, animals, vermin). The study revealed that LGBTQ people overall have been increasingly more humanized over time; however, they were found to be humanized less frequently than the New York Time's in-group identifyer American.[68]

Aliza Luft notes that the role of dehumanizing language and propaganda plays in violence and genocide is far less significant than other factors such as obedience to authority and peer pressure.[69]

 
Depiction of a slave auction in Ancient Rome. Anyone not a Roman citizen was subject to enslavement and was considered private property.

Property takeover edit

 
The Spanish Inquisition would seize the property of those accused of heresy and use the profits to fund the accused's imprisonment, even before trial.

Property scholars define dehumanization as "the failure to recognize an individual's or group's humanity."[70] Dehumanization often occurs alongside property confiscation. When a property takeover is coupled with dehumanization, the result is a dignity taking.[70] There are several examples of dignity takings involving dehumanization.

From its founding, the United States repeatedly engaged in dignity takings from Native American populations, taking indigenous land in an "undeniably horrific, violent, and tragic record" of genocide and ethnocide.[71] As recently as 2013, the degradation of a mountain sacred to the Hopi people—by spraying its peak pot with artificial snow made from wastewater—constituted another dignity taking by the U.S. Forest Service.[71]

The 1921 Tulsa race massacre also constituted a dignity taking involving dehumanization.[72] White rioters dehumanized African Americans by attacking, looting, and destroying homes and businesses in Greenwood, a predominantly Black neighborhood known as "Black Wall Street".[72]

During the Holocaust, mass genocide—a severe form of dehumanization—accompanied the destruction and taking of Jewish property.[73] This constituted a dignity taking.[73]

Undocumented workers in the United States have also been subject to dehumanizing dignity takings when employers treat them as machines instead of people to justify dangerous working conditions.[74] When harsh conditions lead to bodily injury or death, the property destroyed is the physical body.[74]

Media-driven dehumanization edit

The propaganda model of Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky argues that corporate media are able to carry out large-scale, successful dehumanization campaigns when they promote the goals (profit-making) that the corporations are contractually obliged to maximize.[75][76] State media are also capable of carrying out dehumanization campaigns, whether in democracies or dictatorships, which are pervasive enough that the population cannot avoid the dehumanizing memes.[75]

Non-state actors edit

Non-state actors—terrorists in particular—have also resorted to dehumanization to further their cause. The 1960s terrorist group Weather Underground had advocated violence against any authority figure and used the "police are pigs" meme to convince members that they were not harming human beings but merely killing wild animals. Likewise, rhetoric statements such as "terrorists are just scum", is an act of dehumanization.[77]

In science, medicine, and technology edit

 
Jewish twins kept alive in Auschwitz for use in Josef Mengele's medical experiments

Relatively recent history has seen the relationship between dehumanization and science result in unethical scientific research. The Tuskegee syphilis experiment, Unit 731, and Nazi human experimentation on Jewish people are three such examples. In the former, African Americans with syphilis were recruited to participate in a study about the course of the disease. Even when treatment and a cure were eventually developed, they were withheld from the African-American participants so that researchers could continue their study. Similarly, Nazi scientists during the Holocaust conducted horrific experiments on Jewish people and Shiro Ishii's Unit 731 also did so to Chinese, Russian, Mongolian, American, and other nationalities held captive. Both were justified in the name of research and progress, which is indicative of the far-reaching effects that the culture of dehumanization had upon this society. When this research came to light, efforts were made to protect future research participants, and currently, institutional review boards exist to safeguard individuals from being exploited by scientists.

In a medical context, some dehumanizing practices have become more acceptable. While the dissection of human cadavers was seen as dehumanizing in the Dark Ages (see history of anatomy), the value of dissections as a training aid is such that they are now more widely accepted. Dehumanization has been associated with modern medicine generally and has explicitly been suggested as a coping mechanism for doctors who work with patients at the end of life.[10][78] Researchers have identified six potential causes of dehumanization in medicine: deindividuating practices, impaired patient agency, dissimilarity (causes which do not facilitate the delivery of medical treatment), mechanization, empathy reduction, and moral disengagement (which could be argued to facilitate the delivery of medical treatment).[79]

In some US states, legislation requires that a woman view ultrasound images of her fetus before having an abortion. Critics of the law argue that merely seeing an image of the fetus humanizes it and biases women against abortion.[80] Similarly, a recent study showed that subtle humanization of medical patients appears to improve care for these patients. Radiologists evaluating X-rays reported more details to patients and expressed more empathy when a photo of the patient's face accompanied the X-rays.[81] It appears that the inclusion of the photos counteracts the dehumanization of the medical process.

Dehumanization has applications outside traditional social contexts. Anthropomorphism (i.e., perceiving mental and physical capacities that reflect humans in nonhuman entities) is the inverse of dehumanization.[82] Waytz, Epley, and Cacioppo suggest that the inverse of the factors that facilitate dehumanization (e.g., high status, power, and social connection) should promote anthropomorphism. That is, a low status, socially disconnected person without power should be more likely to attribute human qualities to pets or inanimate objects than a high-status, high-power, socially connected person.

Researchers have found that engaging in violent video game play diminishes perceptions of both one's own humanity and the humanity of the players who are targets of the game violence.[83] While the players are dehumanized, the video game characters are often anthropomorphized.

Dehumanization has occurred historically under the pretense of "progress in the name of science". During the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, human zoos exhibited several natives from independent tribes worldwide, most notably a young Congolese man, Ota Benga. Benga's imprisonment was put on display as a public service showcasing "a degraded and degenerate race". During this period, religion was still the driving force behind many political and scientific activities. Because of this, eugenics was widely supported among the most notable U.S. scientific communities, political figures, and industrial elites. After relocating to New York in 1906, public outcry led to the permanent ban and closure of human zoos in the United States.[84]

In philosophy edit

Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard explained his stance of anti-dehumanization in his teachings and interpretations of Christian theology. He wrote in his book Works of Love his understanding to be that "to love one's neighbor means equality… your neighbor is every man… he is your neighbor on the basis of equality with you before God; but this equality absolutely every man has, and he has it absolutely."[85]

In art edit

Spanish romanticism painter Francisco Goya often depicted subjectivity involving the atrocities of war and brutal violence conveying the process of dehumanization. In the romantic period of painting, martyrdom art was most often a means of deifying the oppressed and tormented, and it was common for Goya to depict evil personalities performing these acts; however, he broke convention by dehumanizing these martyr figures: "...one would not know whom the painting depicts, so determinedly has Goya reduced his subjects from martyrs to meat".[86]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

    dehumanization, album, album, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, weasel, words, vague, phrasing, that, often, accompanies, biased,. For the album see Dehumanization album This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed March 2021 This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Dehumanization is the denial of full humanity in others along with the cruelty and suffering that accompany it 1 2 3 A practical definition refers to it as the viewing and the treatment of other people as though they lack the mental capacities that are commonly attributed to human beings 4 In this definition every act or thought that regards a person as less than human is dehumanization 5 In his report on the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising Jurgen Stroop described Jews resisting deportation to Nazi camps as bandits Lynndie England pulling a leash attached to the neck of a prisoner in Abu Ghraib prison who is forced to crawl on the floor while Megan Ambuhl watches Dehumanization is one form of incitement to genocide 6 It has also been used to justify war judicial and extrajudicial killing slavery the confiscation of property denial of suffrage and other rights and to attack enemies or political opponents Contents 1 Conceptualizations 1 1 Humanness 1 2 Objectification 2 History 2 1 Native Americans 3 Causes and facilitating factors 3 1 Race and ethnicity 3 2 Language 3 3 Property takeover 3 4 Media driven dehumanization 3 5 Non state actors 4 In science medicine and technology 5 In philosophy 6 In art 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksConceptualizations edit nbsp Slain Armenians in Erzurum as part of Hamidian massacre Behaviorally dehumanization describes a disposition towards others that debases the others individuality by either portraying it as an individual species or by portraying it as an individual object e g someone who acts inhumanely towards humans As a process dehumanization may be understood as the opposite of personification a figure of speech in which inanimate objects or abstractions are endowed with human qualities dehumanization then is the disendowment of these same qualities or a reduction to abstraction 7 In almost all contexts dehumanization is used pejoratively along with a disruption of social norms with the former applying to the actor s of behavioral dehumanization and the latter applying to the action s or processes of dehumanization For instance there is dehumanization for those who are perceived as lacking in culture or civility which are concepts that are believed to distinguish humans from animals 8 Social norms define humane behavior and reflexively define what is outside of humane behavior or inhumane Dehumanization differs from inhumane behaviors or processes in its breadth to propose competing social norms It is an action of dehumanization as the old norms are depreciated to the competing new norms which then redefine the action of dehumanization If the new norms lose acceptance then the action remains one of dehumanization The definition of dehumanization remains in a reflexive state of a type token ambiguity relative to both individual and societal scales nbsp Two Imperial Japanese Army officers in occupied China who competed to see who could kill one hundred Chinese people with a sword first during the Nanjing Massacre In biological terms dehumanization can be described as an introduced species marginalizing the human species or an introduced person process that debases other people inhumanely 9 In political science and jurisprudence the act of dehumanization is the inferential alienation of human rights or denaturalization of natural rights a definition contingent upon presiding international law rather than social norms limited by human geography In this context a specialty within species does not need to constitute global citizenship or its inalienable rights the human genome inherits both It is theorized that dehumanization takes on two forms animalistic dehumanization which is employed on a mostly intergroup basis and mechanistic dehumanization which is employed on a mostly interpersonal basis 10 Dehumanization can occur discursively e g idiomatic language that likens individual human beings to non human animals verbal abuse erasing one s voice from discourse symbolically e g imagery or physically e g chattel slavery physical abuse refusing eye contact Dehumanization often ignores the target s individuality i e the creative and exciting aspects of their personality and can hinder one from feeling empathy or correctly understanding a stigmatized group 11 Dehumanization may be carried out by a social institution such as a state school or family interpersonally or even within oneself Dehumanization can be unintentional especially upon individuals as with some types of de facto racism State organized dehumanization has historically been directed against perceived political racial ethnic national or religious minority groups Other minoritized and marginalized individuals and groups based on sexual orientation gender disability class or some other organizing principle are also susceptible to various forms of dehumanization The concept of dehumanization has received empirical attention in the psychological literature 12 13 It is conceptually related to infrahumanization 14 delegitimization 15 moral exclusion 16 and objectification 17 Dehumanization occurs across several domains it is facilitated by status power and social connection and results in behaviors like exclusion violence and support for violence against others Dehumanisation is viewed as a central component to intergroup violence because it is frequently the most important precursor to moral exclusion the process by which stigmatized groups are placed outside the boundary in which moral values rules and considerations of fairness apply 18 David Livingstone Smith director and founder of The Human Nature Project at the University of New England argues that historically human beings have been dehumanizing one another for thousands of years 19 In his work The Paradoxes of Dehumanization Smith proposes that dehumanization simultaneously regards people as human and subhuman This paradox comes to light as Smith identifies because the reason people are dehumanized is so their human attributes can be taken advantage of 20 Humanness edit In Herbert Kelman s work on dehumanization humanness has two features identity i e a perception of the person as an individual independent and distinguishable from others capable of making choices and community i e a perception of the person as part of an interconnected network of individuals who care for each other When a target s agency and embeddedness in a community are denied they no longer elicit compassion or other moral responses and may suffer violence 21 Objectification edit Psychologist Barbara Fredrickson and Tomi Ann Roberts argued that the sexual objectification of women extends beyond pornography which emphasizes women s bodies over their uniquely human mental and emotional characteristics to society generally There is a normative emphasis on female appearance that causes women to take a third person perspective on their bodies 22 The psychological distance women may feel from their bodies might cause them to dehumanize themselves Some research has indicated that women and men exhibit a sexual body part recognition bias in which women s sexual body parts are better recognized when presented in isolation than in their entire bodies In contrast men s sexual body parts are better recognized in the context of their entire bodies than in isolation 23 Men who dehumanize women as either animals or objects are more liable to rape and sexually harass women and display more negative attitudes toward female rape victims 24 Philosopher Martha Nussbaum identified seven components of sexual objectification instrumentality denial of autonomy inertness fungibility violability ownership and denial of subjectivity 25 further explanation needed In this context instrumentality refers to when the objectified is used as an instrument to the objectifier s benefit Denial of autonomy occurs in the form of the objectifier underestimating the objectified and denies their capabilities In the case of inertness the objectified is treated as if they are lazy and indolent Fungibility brands the objectified to be easily replaceable Volability is when the objectifier does not respect the objectified person s personal space or boundaries Ownership is when the objectified is seen as another person s property Lastly the denial of subjectivity is a lack of sympathy for the objectified or the dismissal of the notion that the objectified has feelings These seven components cause the objectifier to view the objectified in a disrespectful way therefore treating them so 26 History editThis section needs expansion with Surely this isn t the only example of dehumanization in history You can help by adding to it March 2023 Native Americans edit nbsp Mass grave for the dead Lakota following the Wounded Knee massacre Up to 300 Natives were killed mostly old men women and children 27 Native Americans were dehumanized as merciless Indian savages in the United States Declaration of Independence 28 Following the Wounded Knee massacre in December 1890 author L Frank Baum wrote 29 The Pioneer has before declared that our only safety depends upon the total extermination sic of the Indians Having wronged them for centuries we had better in order to protect our civilization follow it up by one more wrong and wipe these untamed and untamable creatures from the face of the earth In this lies safety for our settlers and the soldiers who are under incompetent commands Otherwise we may expect future years to be as full of trouble with the redskins as those have been in the past In Martin Luther King Jr s book on civil rights Why We Can t Wait he wrote 30 31 32 Our nation was born in genocide when it embraced the doctrine that the original American the Indian was an inferior race Even before there were large numbers of Negroes on our shores the scar of racial hatred had already disfigured colonial society From the sixteenth century forward blood flowed in battles over racial supremacy We are perhaps the only nation which tried as a matter of national policy to wipe out its indigenous population Moreover we elevated that tragic experience into a noble crusade Indeed even today we have not permitted ourselves to reject or to feel remorse for this shameful episode Our literature our films our drama our folklore all exalt it King was an active supporter of the Native American rights movement which he drew parallels with his own leadership of the civil rights movement 32 Both movements aimed to overturn dehumanizing attitudes held by members of the public at large against them 33 Causes and facilitating factors edit nbsp Reproduction of a handbill advertising a slave auction in Charleston South Carolina in 1769 Several lines of psychological research relate to the concept of dehumanization Infrahumanization suggests that individuals think of and treat outgroup members as less human and more like animals 14 while Austrian ethnologist Irenaus Eibl Eibesfeldt uses the term pseudo speciation a term that he borrowed from the psychoanalyst Erik Erikson to imply that the dehumanized person or persons are regarded as not members of the human species 34 Specifically individuals associate secondary emotions which are seen as uniquely human more with the ingroup than with the outgroup Primary emotions those experienced by all sentient beings whether human or other animals are found to be more associated with the outgroup 14 Dehumanization is intrinsically connected with violence 35 36 37 Often one cannot do serious injury to another without first dehumanizing him or her in one s mind as a form of rationalization 38 Military training is among other things systematic desensitization and dehumanization of the enemy and military personnel may find it psychologically necessary to refer to the enemy as an animal or other non human beings Lt Col Dave Grossman has shown that without such desensitization it would be difficult if not impossible for one human to kill another human even in combat or under threat to their own lives 39 nbsp Ota Benga a human exhibit in Bronx Zoo 1906 According to Daniel Bar Tal delegitimization is the categorization of groups into extreme negative social categories which are excluded from human groups that are considered as acting within the limits of acceptable norms and values 15 Moral exclusion occurs when outgroups are subject to a different set of moral values rules and fairness than are used in social relations with ingroup members 16 When individuals dehumanize others they no longer experience distress when they treat them poorly Moral exclusion is used to explain extreme behaviors like genocide harsh immigration policies and eugenics but it can also happen on a more regular everyday discriminatory level In laboratory studies people who are portrayed as lacking human qualities are treated in a particularly harsh and violent manner 40 41 42 clarification needed Dehumanized perception occurs when a subject experiences low frequencies of activation within their social cognition neural network 43 This includes areas of neural networking such as the superior temporal sulcus STS and the medial prefrontal cortex mPFC 44 A 2001 study by psychologists Chris and Uta Frith suggests that the criticality of social interaction within a neural network has tendencies for subjects to dehumanize those seen as disgust inducing leading to social disengagement 45 Tasks involving social cognition typically activate the neural network responsible for subjective projections of disgust inducing perceptions and patterns of dehumanization Besides manipulations of target persons manipulations of social goals validate this prediction Inferring preference a mental state inference significantly increases mPFC and STS activity to these otherwise dehumanized targets who said this 46 A 2007 study by Harris McClure van den Bos Cohen and Fiske suggests that a person s choice to dehumanize another person is due to decreased neural activity towards the projected target This decreased neural activity is identified as low medial prefrontal cortex activation which is associated with perceiving social information incomprehensible 47 While social distance from the outgroup target is a necessary condition for dehumanization some research suggests that this alone is insufficient Psychological research has identified high status power and social connection as additional factors Members of high status groups more often associate humanity with the ingroup than the outgroup while members of low status groups exhibit no differences in associations with humanity Thus having a high status makes one more likely to dehumanize others 48 Low status groups are more associated with human nature traits e g warmth emotionalism than uniquely human characteristics implying that they are closer to animals than humans because these traits are typical of humans but can be seen in other species 49 In addition another line of work found that individuals in a position of power were more likely to objectify their subordinates treating them as a means to one s end rather than focusing on their essentially human qualities 50 Finally social connection thinking about a close other or being in the actual presence of a close other enables dehumanization by reducing the attribution of human mental states increasing support for treating targets like animals and increasing willingness to endorse harsh interrogation tactics 51 This is counterintuitive because social connection has documented personal health and well being benefits but appears to impair intergroup relations Neuroimaging studies have discovered that the medial prefrontal cortex a brain region distinctively involved in attributing mental states to others shows diminished activation to extremely dehumanized targets i e those rated according to the stereotype content model as low warmth and low competence such as drug addicts or homeless people 52 53 Race and ethnicity edit nbsp American propaganda poster from World War II featuring a Japanese soldier depicted as a rat Racist dehumanization entails that groups and individuals are understood as less than fully human by virtue of their race 54 Dehumanization often occurs as a result of intergroup conflict Ethnic and racial others are often represented as animals in popular culture and scholarship There is evidence that this representation persists in the American context with African Americans implicitly associated with apes To the extent that an individual has this dehumanizing implicit association they are more likely to support violence against African Americans e g jury decisions to execute defendants 55 Historically dehumanization is frequently connected to genocidal conflicts in that ideologies before and during the conflict depict victims as subhuman e g rodents 10 Immigrants may also be dehumanized in this manner 56 nbsp Austrian propaganda poster made during World War I depicting a Serb as an ape like terrorist In 1901 the six Australian colonies assented to federation creating the modern nation state of Australia and its government Section 51 xxvi excluded Aboriginals from the groups protected by special laws and section 127 excluded Aboriginals from population counts The Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 categorically denied Aboriginals the right to vote Indigenous Australians were not allowed the social security benefits e g aged pensions and maternity allowances which were provided to others Aboriginals in rural areas were discriminated against and controlled as to where and how they could marry work live and their movements 57 In the U S African Americans were dehumanized by being classified as non human primates A California police officer who was also involved in the Rodney King beating described a dispute between an American Black couple as something right out of Gorillas in the Mist 58 Franz Boas and Charles Darwin hypothesized that there might be an evolutionary process among primates Monkeys and apes were least evolved then savage and deformed anthropoids which referred to people of African ancestry to Caucasians as most developed 59 Language edit Language has been used as an essential tool in the process of dehumanizing others 60 61 Examples of dehumanizing language when referring to a person or group of people may include animal cockroach rat vermin monster ape snake infestation parasite alien savage and subhuman Other examples can include racist sexist and other derogatory forms of language 61 The use of dehumanizing language can influence others to view a targeted group as less human or less deserving of humane treatment 60 In Unit 731 an imperial Japanese biological and chemical warfare research facility brutal experiments were conducted on humans who the researchers referred to as maruta 丸太 meaning logs 62 63 Yoshio Shinozuka Japanese army medic who performed several vivisections in the facility said We called the victims logs We didn t want to think of them as people We didn t want to admit that we were taking lives So we convinced ourselves that what we were doing was like cutting down a tree 64 63 Words such as migrant immigrant and expatriate are assigned to foreigners based on their social status and wealth rather than ability achievements or political alignment Expatriate is a word to describe the privileged often light skinned people newly residing in an area and has connotations that suggest ability wealth and trust Meanwhile the word immigrant is used to describe people coming to a new location to reside and infers a much less desirable meaning 65 The word immigrant is sometimes paired with illegal which harbors a profoundly derogatory connotation Misuse of these terms they are often used inaccurately to describe the other can alter the perception of a group as a whole in a negative way Ryan Eller the executive director of the immigrant advocacy group Define American expressed the problem this way 66 It s not just because it s derogatory but because it s factually incorrect Most of the time when we hear illegal immigrant used most of the time the shorter version illegals is being used as a noun which implies that a human being is perpetually illegal There is no other classification that I m aware of where the individual is being rendered as unlawful as opposed to those individuals actions A series of language examinations found a direct relation between homophobic epithets and social cognitive distancing towards a group of homosexuals a form of dehumanization These epithets e g faggot were thought to function as dehumanizing labels because they tended to act as markers of deviance One pair of studies found that subjects were more likely to associate malignant language with homosexuals and that such language associations increased the physical distancing between the subject and the homosexual This indicated that the malignant language could encourage dehumanization cognitive and physical distancing in ways that other forms of malignant language do not 67 Another study involved a computational linguistic analysis of dehumanizing language regarding LGBTQ individuals and groups in the New York Times from 1986 to 2015 68 The study used previous psychological research on dehuminization to identify four language categories 1 negative evaluations of a target group 2 denial of agency 3 moral disgust and 4 likening members of the target group to non human entities e g machines animals vermin The study revealed that LGBTQ people overall have been increasingly more humanized over time however they were found to be humanized less frequently than the New York Time s in group identifyer American 68 Aliza Luft notes that the role of dehumanizing language and propaganda plays in violence and genocide is far less significant than other factors such as obedience to authority and peer pressure 69 nbsp Depiction of a slave auction in Ancient Rome Anyone not a Roman citizen was subject to enslavement and was considered private property Property takeover edit nbsp The Spanish Inquisition would seize the property of those accused of heresy and use the profits to fund the accused s imprisonment even before trial Property scholars define dehumanization as the failure to recognize an individual s or group s humanity 70 Dehumanization often occurs alongside property confiscation When a property takeover is coupled with dehumanization the result is a dignity taking 70 There are several examples of dignity takings involving dehumanization From its founding the United States repeatedly engaged in dignity takings from Native American populations taking indigenous land in an undeniably horrific violent and tragic record of genocide and ethnocide 71 As recently as 2013 the degradation of a mountain sacred to the Hopi people by spraying its peak pot with artificial snow made from wastewater constituted another dignity taking by the U S Forest Service 71 The 1921 Tulsa race massacre also constituted a dignity taking involving dehumanization 72 White rioters dehumanized African Americans by attacking looting and destroying homes and businesses in Greenwood a predominantly Black neighborhood known as Black Wall Street 72 During the Holocaust mass genocide a severe form of dehumanization accompanied the destruction and taking of Jewish property 73 This constituted a dignity taking 73 Undocumented workers in the United States have also been subject to dehumanizing dignity takings when employers treat them as machines instead of people to justify dangerous working conditions 74 When harsh conditions lead to bodily injury or death the property destroyed is the physical body 74 Media driven dehumanization edit The propaganda model of Edward S Herman and Noam Chomsky argues that corporate media are able to carry out large scale successful dehumanization campaigns when they promote the goals profit making that the corporations are contractually obliged to maximize 75 76 State media are also capable of carrying out dehumanization campaigns whether in democracies or dictatorships which are pervasive enough that the population cannot avoid the dehumanizing memes 75 Non state actors edit Non state actors terrorists in particular have also resorted to dehumanization to further their cause The 1960s terrorist group Weather Underground had advocated violence against any authority figure and used the police are pigs meme to convince members that they were not harming human beings but merely killing wild animals Likewise rhetoric statements such as terrorists are just scum is an act of dehumanization 77 In science medicine and technology edit nbsp Jewish twins kept alive in Auschwitz for use in Josef Mengele s medical experiments Relatively recent history has seen the relationship between dehumanization and science result in unethical scientific research The Tuskegee syphilis experiment Unit 731 and Nazi human experimentation on Jewish people are three such examples In the former African Americans with syphilis were recruited to participate in a study about the course of the disease Even when treatment and a cure were eventually developed they were withheld from the African American participants so that researchers could continue their study Similarly Nazi scientists during the Holocaust conducted horrific experiments on Jewish people and Shiro Ishii s Unit 731 also did so to Chinese Russian Mongolian American and other nationalities held captive Both were justified in the name of research and progress which is indicative of the far reaching effects that the culture of dehumanization had upon this society When this research came to light efforts were made to protect future research participants and currently institutional review boards exist to safeguard individuals from being exploited by scientists In a medical context some dehumanizing practices have become more acceptable While the dissection of human cadavers was seen as dehumanizing in the Dark Ages see history of anatomy the value of dissections as a training aid is such that they are now more widely accepted Dehumanization has been associated with modern medicine generally and has explicitly been suggested as a coping mechanism for doctors who work with patients at the end of life 10 78 Researchers have identified six potential causes of dehumanization in medicine deindividuating practices impaired patient agency dissimilarity causes which do not facilitate the delivery of medical treatment mechanization empathy reduction and moral disengagement which could be argued to facilitate the delivery of medical treatment 79 In some US states legislation requires that a woman view ultrasound images of her fetus before having an abortion Critics of the law argue that merely seeing an image of the fetus humanizes it and biases women against abortion 80 Similarly a recent study showed that subtle humanization of medical patients appears to improve care for these patients Radiologists evaluating X rays reported more details to patients and expressed more empathy when a photo of the patient s face accompanied the X rays 81 It appears that the inclusion of the photos counteracts the dehumanization of the medical process Dehumanization has applications outside traditional social contexts Anthropomorphism i e perceiving mental and physical capacities that reflect humans in nonhuman entities is the inverse of dehumanization 82 Waytz Epley and Cacioppo suggest that the inverse of the factors that facilitate dehumanization e g high status power and social connection should promote anthropomorphism That is a low status socially disconnected person without power should be more likely to attribute human qualities to pets or inanimate objects than a high status high power socially connected person Researchers have found that engaging in violent video game play diminishes perceptions of both one s own humanity and the humanity of the players who are targets of the game violence 83 While the players are dehumanized the video game characters are often anthropomorphized Dehumanization has occurred historically under the pretense of progress in the name of science During the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition human zoos exhibited several natives from independent tribes worldwide most notably a young Congolese man Ota Benga Benga s imprisonment was put on display as a public service showcasing a degraded and degenerate race During this period religion was still the driving force behind many political and scientific activities Because of this eugenics was widely supported among the most notable U S scientific communities political figures and industrial elites After relocating to New York in 1906 public outcry led to the permanent ban and closure of human zoos in the United States 84 In philosophy editDanish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard explained his stance of anti dehumanization in his teachings and interpretations of Christian theology He wrote in his book Works of Love his understanding to be that to love one s neighbor means equality your neighbor is every man he is your neighbor on the basis of equality with you before God but this equality absolutely every man has and he has it absolutely 85 In art editSpanish romanticism painter Francisco Goya often depicted subjectivity involving the atrocities of war and brutal violence conveying the process of dehumanization In the romantic period of painting martyrdom art was most often a means of deifying the oppressed and tormented and it was common for Goya to depict evil personalities performing these acts however he broke convention by dehumanizing these martyr figures one would not know whom the painting depicts so determinedly has Goya reduced his subjects from martyrs to meat 86 See also edit nbsp Psychology portal American mutilation of Japanese war dead Demonization Depersonalization Human zoo Infrahumanisation Life unworthy of life Moral disengagement Nonperson Perceived psychological contract violation Perceived organizational support Pre Adamite Second class citizen Social defeat Ten stages of genocide UntermenschReferences edit Haslam Nick 2006 Dehumanization An Integrative Review Personality and Social Psychology Review 10 3 252 264 doi 10 1207 s15327957pspr1003 4 PMID 16859440 S2CID 18142674 Archived from the original on 2020 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The Dignity Losses and Restoration of the Tulsa Riot of 1921 Law amp Social Inquiry 41 4 824 832 doi 10 1111 lsi 12205 ISSN 0897 6546 S2CID 147798196 a b Veraart Wouter 2016 06 29 Two Rounds of Postwar Restitution and Dignity Restoration in the Netherlands and in France Law amp Social Inquiry 41 4 956 972 doi 10 1111 lsi 12212 ISSN 1747 4469 S2CID 147735669 a b Rathod Jayesh Nadas Rachel 2017 01 01 Damaged Bodies Damaged Lives Immigrant Worker Injuries as Dignity Takings Chicago Kent Law Review 92 3 a b Herman Edward S and Noam Chomsky 1988 Manufacturing Consent the Political Economy of the Mass Media New York Pantheon Page xli Thomas Ferguson 1987 Golden Rule The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the Logic of Money Driven Politics Graham Stephen 2006 Cities and the War on Terror International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 30 2 255 276 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2427 2006 00665 x Schulman Green Dena 2003 Coping mechanisms of physicians who routinely work with dying patients OMEGA Journal of Death and Dying 47 3 253 264 doi 10 2190 950H U076 T5JB X6HN S2CID 71233667 Haque O S Waytz A 2012 Dehumanization in Medicine Causes Solutions and Functions Perspectives on Psychological Science 7 2 176 186 doi 10 1177 1745691611429706 PMID 26168442 S2CID 1670448 Sanger C 2008 Seeing and believing Mandatory ultrasound and the path to a protected choice UCLA Law Review 56 351 408 Turner Y amp Hadas Halpern I 2008 December 3 The effects of including a patient s photograph to the radiographic examination Archived 2014 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Paper presented at Radiological Society of North America Chicago IL Waytz A Epley N Cacioppo J T 2010 Social Cognition Unbound Insights Into Anthropomorphism and Dehumanization PDF Current Directions in Psychological Science 19 1 58 62 doi 10 1177 0963721409359302 PMC 4020342 PMID 24839358 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2014 11 07 Bastian Brock Jetten Jolanda Radke Helena R M 2012 Cyber dehumanization Violent video game play diminishes our humanity Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 48 2 486 491 doi 10 1016 j jesp 2011 10 009 S2CID 51784778 Newkirk Pamela 2015 06 03 The man who was caged in a zoo Pamela Newkirk The Guardian Archived from the original on 2015 12 08 Retrieved 2015 12 08 Kierkegaard Soren 1962 Works of Love New York Harper and Row Publishers p 72 Anderson Emma 2013 The Death and Afterlife of the North American Martyrs United States Harvard University Press p 91 ISBN 9780674726161 External links edithttps web archive org web 20100929000211 http www psychwiki com wiki Dehumanization Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dehumanization amp oldid 1221128969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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