Date of Award

5-2025

Degree Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Honors Thesis

Department

Psychology

First Advisor

Conor O'Dea

Second Advisor

Alexander Roehrkasse

Abstract

Honor ideology revolves around the idea that men must obey strict masculine norms including toughness, bravery, and a lack of showing one’s emotions. These expectations contribute to stigma against mental illness and help seeking behavior due to perceptions that these behaviors are “unmanly”. Research has failed to examine who men who act in an honor consistent way (i.e., aggressive response to threat) but also struggle with mental health issues may be perceived within the framework of honor ideology. For this reason, we explored whether masculine honor ideology predicted differing perceptions of a man with schizophrenia versus a man without mental illness who both responded aggressively to an honor threat. We hypothesized that the man without schizophrenia would have more positive perceptions than the man with schizophrenia (especially by those higher in honor ideology). Further, consistent with prior research, participants higher in honor ideology would perceive retaliatory aggression more favorably. We found that people with stronger masculine honor beliefs generally viewed both men’s aggression more favorably, reinforcing the idea that violence can be justified if it aligns with honor norms. However, the man with schizophrenia was seen as overreacting, more dangerous, and in greater need of psychiatric treatment than the man without a mental illness. These findings reveal a double standard: while aggression may be socially accepted or even praised when done in response to threat, men with mental health concerns are still stigmatized, even when they behave in line with those same norms. This highlights the deep-rooted bias against mental illness and the limits of acceptance within honor-based value systems.

Included in

Psychology Commons

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