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Original Articles

Taking a Turn Toward the Masculine: The Impact of Mortality Salience on Implicit Leadership Theories

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Pages 374-381 | Published online: 07 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

The present research investigates the influence of subtle death-related thoughts (i.e., mortality salience) on people's images of effective leaders (i.e., their implicit leadership theories [ILTs]). We test the prediction that mortality salience will change the content of these implicit theories to be more gender stereotypical such that individuals will conceive of effective leaders in a significantly more masculine, or agentic, manner. To test this prediction, we assessed the communal and agentic components of participants' ILTs after they were presented with a mortality salience or control manipulation. Results show that priming individuals to think about their mortality with two open-ended questions resulted in a significant shift in their ILTs such that an effective leader is described in significantly more agentic terms compared to the control condition. This masculine shift in people's ILTs was demonstrated in both women and men, and mortality salience did not influence perceptions of effective leaders' communal traits. This work contributes to research on gender bias in leadership, ILTs, and terror management theory and has implications for female leaders.

Notes

1To test if we could stifle the effects of mortality salience by making people think rationally (Simon et al., Citation1997), half of the participants were instructed to think rationally when responding to the open-ended questions. However, these instructions had no impact on any of the results.

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