
@article{ref1,
title="&quot;Passive victim - strong survivor&quot;? Perceived meaning of labels applied to women who were raped",
journal="PLoS one",
year="2017",
author="Papendick, Michael and Bohner, Gerd",
volume="12",
number="5",
pages="e0177550-e0177550",
abstract="Three experiments (total N = 464) were conducted in parallel with English- and German-speaking participants to examine the perceived meanings and effects of the labels &quot;victim&quot; versus &quot;survivor&quot; (and their German equivalents) when applied to a woman who was raped. In Study 1 (N = 179), participants read a rape vignette and then rated the meaning of the label it contained (either &quot;victim&quot; or &quot;survivor&quot;) on a 15-item semantic differential. Independent of language and participant gender, &quot;survivor&quot; was perceived more positively overall (e.g., as strong, brave, active) than was &quot;victim&quot; (weak, passive, but also innocent). In Study 2 (N = 95), labels were varied within items assessing judgments of an acquaintance-rape case (e.g., &quot;Does the victim [survivor] … carry a certain responsibility for what happened?&quot;), focusing on short-term outcomes. Significant interaction effects of label and participants' gender emerged on case-related judgments. Participants in both language samples judged &quot;survivor&quot; to be a less appropriate term than &quot;victim&quot;. In Study 3 (N = 190), participants read a text in which a woman who had been raped labeled herself as either &quot;victim&quot; or &quot;survivor&quot;, focusing on the coping with sexual violence. As in Study 2, German-language participants showed no significant effects of the label on their case judgments but rejected the term &quot;survivor&quot; as inappropriate; English-language participants, by contrast, perceived the woman describing herself as &quot;survivor&quot; to be more psychologically stable and regarded the use of both labels as appropriate. <br><br>RESULTS are discussed in terms of their applied relevance for communicating about sexual violence.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1932-6203",
doi="10.1371/journal.pone.0177550",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0177550"
}