Text One
AllportChapters
The Nature of Prejudice
Gordon Allport
Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. Inc.
Introduction ix-xxii
PERFERENTIAL THINKING
1. What is the Problem 3- 15
2, The Normality of Prejudice 17-28
3. Formation of Ingroups 29-47
4. Rejection of Outgroups 48-67
5. Patterning and extent of Prejudice 68-84
GROUP DIFFERENCES
6. The Scientific Study of Group Differences 85-106
7. Racial and Ethnic Differences 107-128
8. Visibility and Strangers 129-141
9. Traits Due to Victimization 142-164
PERCEIVING AND THINKING ABOUT GROUP DIFFERENES
10. The Cognitive Process 165-177
11. Linguistic Factors 178-188
12. Stereotypes in Our Culture189-205
13. Theories of Prejudice
SOCIOCULTURAL FACTORS
http://www.tolerance.org/news/feature/okstate/
14. Social Structure and Cultural Pattern 221-242
15. Choice of Scapegoats 243-260
16. The Effect of Contact 261-284
ACQUIRING PREJUDICE
17. Conforming 285-296
18. The Young Child 297-311
19. Later Learning 312-324
20. Inner Conflict 326-341
THE DYNAMIC OF PREJUDICE
21. Frustration 343-353
22. Aggression and Hatred 354-366
23. Anxiety, Sex and Guilt 267-380
24. Projection 282-294
CHARACTER STRUCTURES
25. The Prejudice Personality 395-409
26. Demagogy 410-424
27. The Tolerant Personality 425-434
28. Religion and Prejudice 444-460
REDUCING GROUP TENSIONS
29. Ought There To Be A Law? 461-478
30. Evaluation of Programs 479-500
31. Limitations and Horizons 501-519
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Extra
From: Anti-Defamation League
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Offender Types Model:
Naïve -
unaware of issues
Thrill Seeker - aware
but follower or context driven
Reactive - acts as
a response to an event
Mission Focused - act from a philosophical
basis