Litcius/Paper detail

When meat-eaters expect vegan food to taste bad: Veganism as a symbolic threat

Daniel L. Rosenfeld, Hank Rothgerber, A. Janet Tomiyama

2023Group Processes & Intergroup Relations15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People who eat meat generally expect vegan food to taste bad. We theorize that this expectation stems in part from the perception that veganism is symbolically threatening; devaluing vegan food may enable meat-eaters to defend in-group values and defuse symbolic threat. We conducted four studies (total N = 1,563) on meat-eaters residing in the US. In Studies 1a and 1b, participants who most strongly endorsed carnism—the ideology that humans have a right to eat animals and their byproducts as food—were most likely to expect vegan food to taste bad. In Study 2, perceptions of veganism as symbolically threatening explained the relationship between carnism and taste expectations. In Study 3, experimentally increasing the salience of symbolic threat worsened taste expectations. Attachment to dominant group values and perceptions of intergroup threat may be barriers to the acceptance of veganism.

Topics & Concepts

TastePerceptionIdeologyPsychologyVegan DietSocial psychologyFood choiceSalience (neuroscience)Political sciencePoliticsLawNeuroscienceMedicineInternal medicineCognitive psychologyPathologyAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesAnimal and Plant Science Education
When meat-eaters expect vegan food to taste bad: Veganism as a symbolic threat | Litcius