2014
DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.2073
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Nostalgia counteracts self‐discontinuity and restores self‐continuity

Abstract: Nostalgia is a resource that functions, in part, as a response to self-discontinuity and a source of self-continuity. We tested and supported this regulatory role of nostalgia in the tradition of establishing a causal chain. In Study 1, we examined the naturalistic association between events precipitating self-discontinuity and nostalgia. Self-discontinuity, especially when stemming from negative life events, was associated with higher proneness to nostalgia. In Study 2, we experimentally induced negative self… Show more

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Cited by 220 publications
(254 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
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“…We expected that individuals who were more Yugonostalgic would also more readily seek contacts with ethnic out-group members from former Yugoslavia, because through such contacts they could psychologically restore the past that they longed for. This is in line with research showing that nostalgia functions as a coping mechanism to deal with identity discontinuity (Sedikides, Wildschut, Routledge, & Arndt, 2015), and with research that indicates that nostalgia about an encounter with an out-group member is associated with a Collective Memory of a Dissolved Country 592 sense of having a shared identity and more positive out-group attitudes (Turner, Wildschut, & Sedikides, 2012).…”
Section: Yugonostalgiasupporting
confidence: 88%
“…We expected that individuals who were more Yugonostalgic would also more readily seek contacts with ethnic out-group members from former Yugoslavia, because through such contacts they could psychologically restore the past that they longed for. This is in line with research showing that nostalgia functions as a coping mechanism to deal with identity discontinuity (Sedikides, Wildschut, Routledge, & Arndt, 2015), and with research that indicates that nostalgia about an encounter with an out-group member is associated with a Collective Memory of a Dissolved Country 592 sense of having a shared identity and more positive out-group attitudes (Turner, Wildschut, & Sedikides, 2012).…”
Section: Yugonostalgiasupporting
confidence: 88%
“…The theory states that people strive to construct and maintain a sense of self-continuity, and that succeeding in this task may have important implications for personal and societal well-being. Studies have shown evidence that individuals strive to achieve and maintain a sense of self-continuity (Sedikides, Wildschut, Routledge, & Arndt, 2015;Shrauger, 1975; Troll & Skaff, 1997;Vignoles, Regalia, Manzi, Golledge, & Scabini, 2006; SELF-CONTINUITY ACROSS CULTURES 8 Vignoles, Manzi, Regalia, Jemmolo, & Scabini, 2008), and that deficits or threats to selfcontinuity are associated with negative personal and societal outcomes, including low selfesteem, dissociation, negative intergroup attitudes, and suicidality (Ball & Chandler, 1989;Lampinen, Odegard, & Leding, 2004; Rosenberg, 1986;Smeekes & Verkuyten, 2015).People may construct a sense of self-continuity in different ways. Focusing on pastto-present continuity, Chandler and colleagues (2003) proposed and found that "continuity warrants"-the reasons that people gave when asked explicitly to justify their selfcontinuity-could be classified into two different 'streams', which they called 'essentialist'…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, people may also bolster their sense of self-continuity on a more implicit and intuitive level, without engaging in explicit reasoning. Sedikides et al (2015) showed that feelings of nostalgia for one's past can increase self-continuity, and that people may compensate for discontinuities by using nostalgia to restore self-continuity. Research has also suggested that people use cherished possessions to bolster self-continuity, especially during major life-transitions (Habermas & Paha, 2002;Kroger & Adair, 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As a result, a totemic text becomes profoundly enmeshed as a resource of meaning-making, of self-identity, self-narrative and self-continuity. Symbolic threats may emerge that threaten the sanctity of the totemic relationship between self and object, and can induce nostalgic narratives as a method of meaning preservation as a regulatory and restorative balm (Sedikides et al, 2015). These threats may take multiple forms, as we have seen, including the strategy of rebooting, whereby a new text "writes over" an extant narrative totem to begin again in a distinct spatiotemporal location.…”
Section: Ghostbusters In (Development) Hellmentioning
confidence: 99%