Javascript must be enabled to continue!
In Defense of Shame: Shame in the Context of Guilt and Embarrassment
View through CrossRef
We are interested in the relations among shame, guilt, and embarrassment and especially in how each relates to judgments of character. We start by analyzing the distinction between being and feeling guilty, and unearth the role of shame as a guilt feeling. We proceed to examine shame and guilt in relation to moral responsibility and to flaws of character. We address a recent psychological finding (Tangney, Wagner, Hill‐Barlow, and Marshall, 1996; Tangney, Hill‐Barlow, Wagner and Marshall, 1996) that shame is both destructive and in so far as it has a social function could be replaced by guilt. We reinterpret the guilt culture/shame culture distinction in terms of our way of distinguishing these emotions. Finally we examine embarrassment as distinct from shame and find the difference to lie not so much in the phenomenology of the participant as it is in context, and in which elements of the context the speaker describing the emotion wishes to stress. We conclude by defending shame despite its psychological troubles.
Title: In Defense of Shame: Shame in the Context of Guilt and Embarrassment
Description:
We are interested in the relations among shame, guilt, and embarrassment and especially in how each relates to judgments of character.
We start by analyzing the distinction between being and feeling guilty, and unearth the role of shame as a guilt feeling.
We proceed to examine shame and guilt in relation to moral responsibility and to flaws of character.
We address a recent psychological finding (Tangney, Wagner, Hill‐Barlow, and Marshall, 1996; Tangney, Hill‐Barlow, Wagner and Marshall, 1996) that shame is both destructive and in so far as it has a social function could be replaced by guilt.
We reinterpret the guilt culture/shame culture distinction in terms of our way of distinguishing these emotions.
Finally we examine embarrassment as distinct from shame and find the difference to lie not so much in the phenomenology of the participant as it is in context, and in which elements of the context the speaker describing the emotion wishes to stress.
We conclude by defending shame despite its psychological troubles.
Related Results
Shame and HIV: Strategies for addressing the negative impact shame has on public health and diagnosis and treatment of HIV
Shame and HIV: Strategies for addressing the negative impact shame has on public health and diagnosis and treatment of HIV
AbstractThere are five ways in which shame might negatively impact upon our attempts to combat and treat HIV.
Shame can prevent an individual from disclosing all the relevant fact...
Settler Shame: A Critique of the Role of Shame in Settler–Indigenous Relationships in Canada
Settler Shame: A Critique of the Role of Shame in Settler–Indigenous Relationships in Canada
This article both defines and shows the limits of settler shame for achieving decolonialized justice. It discusses the work settler shame does in “healing” the nation and deliverin...
Shame and vicarious shame in the news: A case study of the Sewol ferry disaster
Shame and vicarious shame in the news: A case study of the Sewol ferry disaster
This study examines how shame, a psychological mechanism suppressing the violation of social norms, is reflected in the news. The results of a content analysis of the South Korean ...
Dirty Rotten Shame? The Value and Ethical Functions of Shame
Dirty Rotten Shame? The Value and Ethical Functions of Shame
Approaching the human condition of shame from an ethical point of view, this essay traces the problems involving the relationship between shame and guilt, and between shame and the...
Productive faces of shame: An interview with Elspeth Probyn
Productive faces of shame: An interview with Elspeth Probyn
Shame has typically been understood as a negative emotion, a view which is prevalent in individualist, psychologising discourses about human experience. Elspeth Probyn's approach t...
From Shame to Shaming: towards an Analysis of Shame Narratives
From Shame to Shaming: towards an Analysis of Shame Narratives
Abstract
This paper examines shame in three narratives involving the social self and the evaluative perception of that self. The semiotic square is used for analysing some of ...
Our Inner Custodian
Our Inner Custodian
Current approaches to understanding shame are rooted in controversial and even radically contrasting assumptions about shame and its relevance for social interaction and individual...
Shame On You, Shame On Me? Nussbaum on Shame Punishment
Shame On You, Shame On Me? Nussbaum on Shame Punishment
abstract Shame punishments have become an increasingly popular alternative to traditional punishments, often taking the form of convicted criminals holding signs or sweeping stre...