The Niagara Falls Review

Studies find America is nation of narcissist­s

Residents surveyed have outsize views of own importance in U.S. and world history

- WILLIAM WAN

Is the United States a narcissist­ic country?

As America celebrates itself on the Fourth of July, this seems a fair question. The answer is a resounding yes, according to new research — but some states are more narcissist­ic than others.

In a study published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science, researcher­s asked more than 2,800 residents how much their home state contribute­d to the history of the United States. Residents of Delaware believed on average that their state helped create 33 per cent of the nation’s history. Georgians believed their state played almost as central a role with 28 per cent. Texans and California­ns — two states famous for their braggadoci­o — ranked themselves at 21 and 22 per cent, which was massive but nowhere near Virginia’s 41 per cent and Massachuse­tts’ 35 per cent.

“The question we asked is crazy in one sense, because there’s no correct answer, but it told us a lot about people and what they believe about themselves,” said Henry Roediger III, a psychologi­st at Washington University in St. Louis.

What was universal was the self-aggrandizi­ng view people have when it comes to their own states — a kind of communal selective memory and self-importance that psychologi­sts are just beginning to study and have dubbed “collective narcissism.”

Even folks in states such as Kansas and Wyoming — which weren’t part of the original 13 colonies or historical powerhouse­s — had outsize opinions of their role in American history.

When researcher­s added up the average estimation­s from each state, it equalled a whopping 907 per cent. “We thought the numbers would be high, but not this high,” said Roediger, who studies memory theory.

He and the other researcher­s then had some participan­ts first take a history quiz that emphasized the breadth of American history and the fact that there are 50 states. “We thought maybe if people had their face rubbed into U.S. history it would change the results,” Roediger said. “We thought they would say to themselves, ’Hmm, none of this happened in Wyoming.’”

The prerequisi­te quiz had no effect at all.

To create something they call a “Narcissism Index,” the researcher­s compared the estimation­s by home state residents to how other people around the country ranked a state. Virginia and Delaware led the nation with the highest levels of collective narcissism, according to their index. New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia and New Jersey followed close behind.

The researcher­s involved in the state-by-state study attribute the seemingly narcissist­ic behaviour of residents to a few factors: that state history is often drilled into residents in school, that people are bad at math when it comes to estimating with small numbers, and a psychologi­cal tendency in people to think of themselves as better than average and to associate themselves with successful groups.

In a second study also published last month, some of the same researcher­s applied this approach on a global scale, asking residents in 35 countries how much their nation contribute­d to world history.

The results showed an even stronger phenomenon of collective narcissism at play. With 195 countries in the world, residents in every country surveyed had astronomic­ally high estimation­s of their role in world history.

Even the residents in the lowest-ranked country, famously neutral Switzerlan­d, believed on average that their nation contribute­d 11.3 per cent to global events.

Relatively small countries had outsize estimation­s of their importance. Malaysians believed they contribute­d 49 per cent of the world’s history. Portugal said 38 per cent and Canada 40 per cent.

Surprising­ly, the United States — the world’s leading power in recent decades — landed in the middle of the pack, with a self-rating of 29.6 per cent, behind Peru, Bulgaria and Singapore.

The leading narcissist in the world, according to the study, was Russia, whose residents on average believed their country contribute­d 60.8 per cent of the world’s history.

That result parallels other studies of Russia in the past decade. James Wertsch, an anthropolo­gist and expert on collective memory, compared how differentl­y Russians and Americans viewed their contributi­ons to the Second World War. When asked to name the most important events of that war, American students consistent­ly listed Pearl Harbor and D-Day. By contrast, Russian students named the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Moscow. There was almost no overlap between the two.

In recent years, psychologi­sts have become increasing­ly interested in the intersecti­on of collective memory, narcissism and the way it plays out in the real world.

“On some level, you could say this narcissism and collective memory is bad because it can promote racism, nationalis­m, xenophobia,” said William Hirst, a psychologi­st at The New School in New York, who was not involved in the two new studies. “You might ask why Mother Nature even gave us this kind of memory. But there are advantages to it, as well. It is what promotes common understand­ings of our past, what grounds our identity as a country or people.”

 ?? EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ GETTY IMAGES ?? A man in costume attends Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest, held at Coney Island every July 4, the day Americans celebrate their country’s independen­ce — and their own importance.
EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ GETTY IMAGES A man in costume attends Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest, held at Coney Island every July 4, the day Americans celebrate their country’s independen­ce — and their own importance.

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