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      The Exonerating Effect of Sexual Objectification: Sexual Objectification Decreases Rapist Blame in a Stranger Rape Context

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          Moral typecasting: divergent perceptions of moral agents and moral patients.

          Moral agency is the capacity to do right or wrong, whereas moral patiency is the capacity to be a target of right or wrong. Through 7 studies, the authors explored moral typecasting-an inverse relation between perceptions of moral agency and moral patiency. Across a range of targets and situations, good- and evil-doers (moral agents) were perceived to be less vulnerable to having good and evil done to them. The recipients of good and evil (moral patients), in turn, were perceived as less capable of performing good or evil actions. Moral typecasting stems from the dyadic nature of morality and explains curious effects such as people's willingness to inflict greater pain on those who do good than those who do nothing.
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            Perceptions of stranger and acquaintance rape: The role of benevolent and hostile sexism in victim blame and rape proclivity.

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              Objectifying Sarah Palin: Evidence that objectification causes women to be perceived as less competent and less fully human

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sex Roles
                Sex Roles
                Springer Nature
                0360-0025
                1573-2762
                June 2015
                May 2015
                : 72
                : 11-12
                : 499-508
                Article
                10.1007/s11199-015-0482-0
                7612ae13-6c11-4f48-82e5-9fb7ca3c8df7
                © 2015
                History

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