Multiple Identities and Psychological Well-Being: A Reformulation and Test of the Social Isolation Hypothesis

1983 American Sociological Review 1,341 citations

Abstract

Drawing upon symbolic interactionist theory, this paper reconceptualizes social isolation as the possession offew social identities. Social identities (enacted in role relationships) give meaning and guidance to behavior, and thus should prevent anxiety, depression, and disordered conduct. The accumulation hypothesis-the more identities possessed by an actor, the less psychological distress helshe should exhibit-is tested and supported using panel data from the New Haven community survey (Myers et al., 1971). The interaction between identity accumulation and identity change is also examined, under differing assumptions regarding the structure of multiple identities. Results indicate that integrated individuals benefit more from identity gain and also suffer more from identity loss than isolated individuals. The implications of these results for social isolation theory and for previous conceptions of the effects of multiple roles are discussed.

Keywords

Isolation (microbiology)PsychologyTest (biology)Social isolationSocial psychologySocial identity theorySociologyCriminologySocial groupPsychotherapist

Related Publications

A Structural Theory of Personal Consistency

Based on a structural model of self-conception, this paper proposes a theory of personal consistency. This theory emphasizes certain parameters from distributions of identities ...

1985 Social Psychology Quarterly 30 citations

Publication Info

Year
1983
Type
article
Volume
48
Issue
2
Pages
174-174
Citations
1341
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1341
OpenAlex

Cite This

Peggy A. Thoits (1983). Multiple Identities and Psychological Well-Being: A Reformulation and Test of the Social Isolation Hypothesis. American Sociological Review , 48 (2) , 174-174. https://doi.org/10.2307/2095103

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2095103