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Concepts that are sometimes associated with repression, but which are conceptually different, are also discussed in this paper: The act of suppression, ‘repressed memories,’ habitual suppression, concealment, type C coping pattern, type D personality, denial, alexithymia and blunting.
Each form of response to repression has its associated risk, costs and benefits, can be coherent with the cultural environment, ideology or beliefs, and can be congruent with the shared identity or not (Bernstein, 1997; Moghadam and Gheytanchi, 2010).
Jul 10, 2024 · What actions do people choose in order to resist and why, and when do resistance strategies change? What causes people to come together or fall out over whether and how to resist? When and why does resistance under repressive conditions escalate or fade away?
Jul 25, 2007 · Concepts that are sometimes associated with repression, but which are conceptually different, are also discussed in this paper: The act of suppression, ‘repressed memories,’ habitual suppression, concealment, type C coping pattern, type D personality, denial, alexithymia and blunting.
- Bert Garssen
- bgarssen@hdi.nl
- 2007
Jul 10, 2024 · Each chapter in this volume contextualizes resistance in ways that widen and deepen our understanding of people’s choices regarding whether and how to engage in resistance, when and how people avoid versus face the existential risks that repression can entail, and the subjective meanings people give to their actions and to the concept of ...
Jan 1, 2012 · Resistance to change has affective, cognitive, and behavioral components that create a psychological resistance to making a change in particular situations or overall changes in one's life, and often appears in psychotherapy and/or when organizational alterations are underway.
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RESISTANCE TO CHANGE: A SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE THE PHENOMENON OF RESISTANCE TO CHANGE HAS BEEN CENTRAL TO THE study of social psychology since the very inception of the field. In the late nineteenth century, the American sociologist Thorstein Vehlen (1857-1929) took sober notice of the inherently conservative aspects of