When Catholic and Polish Identity Goals Meet: Goal Overlap via a Sense of Belonging

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When Catholic and Polish Identity Goals Meet: Goal Overlap via a Sense of Belonging. / Spychalska-Waszek, Hanna; Zaman, Sadia; Doerflinger, Johannes T. et al.
In: Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, Vol. 16, No. 1, 03.2024, p. 104-113.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Spychalska-Waszek H, Zaman S, Doerflinger JT, Gollwitzer PM, Byrka K. When Catholic and Polish Identity Goals Meet: Goal Overlap via a Sense of Belonging. Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. 2024 Mar;16(1):104-113. doi: 10.1037/rel0000487

Bibtex

@article{38fb5402bc3b4eb9978f88b84ce55b07,
title = "When Catholic and Polish Identity Goals Meet: Goal Overlap via a Sense of Belonging",
abstract = "People often strive to simultaneously attain their religious and national identity goals. The degree to which these goals are associated is referred to as identity goal overlap. In the present research, the overlap between the two identity goals of being a Catholic and being a Pole was assessed via the sense of belonging to the Catholic or Polish community and varied by the exposure to unifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving only one identity goal) versus multifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving the two identity goals). In Studies 1 and 2 (N = 220 and N = 252), participants read scenarios in which the protagonist, while celebrating Christmas Eve (Study 1) or Easter Sunday breakfast (Study 2), either performed religious Catholic and/or traditionally Polish behaviors. Participants{\textquoteright} overlap was measured before and after reading scenarios. The same pattern of results in both studies was observed: an increase in the identity goal overlap in the multifinal condition and a drop in the overlap in the unifinal national condition; the effects were stronger for Christmas than for Easter. Study 3 (N = 222) suggests that this difference is likely due to the fact that Christmas more than Easter is activating social motives. These findings indicate that identity goal overlap is malleable by subtle manipulations of the situational context.",
keywords = "Catholic identity goal, Identity goal overlap, Multifinality, National identity goal, Unifinality, Psychology",
author = "Hanna Spychalska-Waszek and Sadia Zaman and Doerflinger, {Johannes T.} and Gollwitzer, {Peter M.} and Katarzyna Byrka",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 American Psychological Association",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1037/rel0000487",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "104--113",
journal = "Psychology of Religion and Spirituality",
issn = "1941-1022",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - When Catholic and Polish Identity Goals Meet

T2 - Goal Overlap via a Sense of Belonging

AU - Spychalska-Waszek, Hanna

AU - Zaman, Sadia

AU - Doerflinger, Johannes T.

AU - Gollwitzer, Peter M.

AU - Byrka, Katarzyna

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 American Psychological Association

PY - 2024/3

Y1 - 2024/3

N2 - People often strive to simultaneously attain their religious and national identity goals. The degree to which these goals are associated is referred to as identity goal overlap. In the present research, the overlap between the two identity goals of being a Catholic and being a Pole was assessed via the sense of belonging to the Catholic or Polish community and varied by the exposure to unifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving only one identity goal) versus multifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving the two identity goals). In Studies 1 and 2 (N = 220 and N = 252), participants read scenarios in which the protagonist, while celebrating Christmas Eve (Study 1) or Easter Sunday breakfast (Study 2), either performed religious Catholic and/or traditionally Polish behaviors. Participants’ overlap was measured before and after reading scenarios. The same pattern of results in both studies was observed: an increase in the identity goal overlap in the multifinal condition and a drop in the overlap in the unifinal national condition; the effects were stronger for Christmas than for Easter. Study 3 (N = 222) suggests that this difference is likely due to the fact that Christmas more than Easter is activating social motives. These findings indicate that identity goal overlap is malleable by subtle manipulations of the situational context.

AB - People often strive to simultaneously attain their religious and national identity goals. The degree to which these goals are associated is referred to as identity goal overlap. In the present research, the overlap between the two identity goals of being a Catholic and being a Pole was assessed via the sense of belonging to the Catholic or Polish community and varied by the exposure to unifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving only one identity goal) versus multifinality (i.e., a set of activities serving the two identity goals). In Studies 1 and 2 (N = 220 and N = 252), participants read scenarios in which the protagonist, while celebrating Christmas Eve (Study 1) or Easter Sunday breakfast (Study 2), either performed religious Catholic and/or traditionally Polish behaviors. Participants’ overlap was measured before and after reading scenarios. The same pattern of results in both studies was observed: an increase in the identity goal overlap in the multifinal condition and a drop in the overlap in the unifinal national condition; the effects were stronger for Christmas than for Easter. Study 3 (N = 222) suggests that this difference is likely due to the fact that Christmas more than Easter is activating social motives. These findings indicate that identity goal overlap is malleable by subtle manipulations of the situational context.

KW - Catholic identity goal

KW - Identity goal overlap

KW - Multifinality

KW - National identity goal

KW - Unifinality

KW - Psychology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85145952326&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/a223c4cb-9227-3a8c-90bc-8da8c200a5ff/

U2 - 10.1037/rel0000487

DO - 10.1037/rel0000487

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85145952326

VL - 16

SP - 104

EP - 113

JO - Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

JF - Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

SN - 1941-1022

IS - 1

ER -

DOI