Logo image
Mentality or morality? Membership categorization, multiple meanings and mass murder
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Mentality or morality? Membership categorization, multiple meanings and mass murder

M. Rapley, D. McCarthy and A. McHoul
British Journal of Social Psychology, Vol.42(3), pp.427-444
2003
pdf
mentality_or_morality.pdfDownloadView
Author’s Version Open Access
url
Link to Published Version *Subscription may be requiredView

Abstract

A central topic for social psychology is how we identify, categorize or represent ourselves to ourselves and to each other. Previous work on this topic stemming from attribution theory, social identity theory, self-categorization theory and social representations theory has tended to accept the dominant cognitivist tenet of an interior self which is (with varying degrees of success) re-presented in ordinary discourse. Against this tradition, and drawing on membership categorization analysis, we argue here for an attention to ordinary members' methods of categorizing the self. Such devices are constitutive of a culture. Accounts of the self (whether lay or professional) cannot avoid reliance on such devices. Our particular case involves a corpus of materials from the press surrounding the Port Arthur massacre: the shooting of 35 people by a lone gunman, Martin Bryant, in Tasmania in 1996. In this case, where public accountings for what ‘makes up’ a particular person are tied to an otherwise inexplicable but ultra-newsworthy event, we find that lay and professional methods of accounting are remarkably congruent. One of the reasons for this congruence, we suggest, is that the categorization of persons is a fundamentally moral matter. Devices for producing everyday moral accounts, in actual practical circumstances, precede and ground, for example, ‘technical’, ‘clinical’ or ‘scientific’ judgments. We conclude that describing such routine (but ultimately grounding) cultural devices can be a central goal of social psychology, as opposed to explaining ‘the self’ by tacitly relying upon those same devices in an unacknowledged and unproblematized fashion.

Details

Metrics

2215 File views/ downloads
422 Record Views

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.69 Language & Linguistics
6.69.610 Discourse Pragmatics
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Social
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
Logo image