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To Cancel or Not to Cancel. That Is the Question. The Role of Quest for Significance and Significance Loss in Cancel Culture

Pedro Altungy, Margarida Ribeiro, Sara Liébana, Ashley Navarro‐McCarthy, Luis Carlos Jaume and Marcelo Agustin Roca

Social Science Quarterly, 2025, vol. 106, issue 4

Abstract: OBJECTIVE The phenomenon of cancellation is gaining in social impact and significance in the last decade. There is significant research from political science about this topic, but little is yet known from a psychological perspective. The aim of the present research was to analyze how significance loss and personality traits might influence people's attitudes in supporting or rejecting cancel culture attitudes and behaviors. METHOD In an experimental study with 122 Portuguese people (70.5% women, mean age: 28.59 years), significance levels were manipulated to test their impact on cancel culture support, controlling the influence of personality traits (openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeability, neuroticism), and political orientation. RESULTS Analyses showed that those identifying themselves are more left‐wing oriented (β = ‐0.43; p

Date: 2025
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