Public self-consciousness and self-esteem after self-presentation Cover Image

Publiczna samoświadomość a samoocena po dokonanej autoprezentacji
Public self-consciousness and self-esteem after self-presentation

Author(s): Jakub Kuś
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Psychology, Sociology
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Scholar Sp. z o.o.
Keywords: self-consciousness; self-esteem; self-presentation

Summary/Abstract: In this article I am verifying the hypothesis that a high level of public self-consciousness influences the degree in which a person adjusts self-knowledge to self-presentation. According to the theory of self-consciousness (Carver & Scheier, 1981), people are characterized by a certain level of self-consciousness: public and private. In a particular moment person focuses attention on experiences and emotions (private self-consciousness) or on the opinions of others (public self-consciousness). Based on previous research results, I’ve assumed that a high level of public self-consciousness favors adaptive changes in the self-knowledge. In this study I also manipulated the degree of involvement in self-presentation. In first condition respondents were asked do present themselves as an „independent in thinking person”. In the second condition participants only expected for presentation. The level of chronic self-consciousness was also measured. The results showed that the strongest adaptive change in self-knowledge occurred in the group where participants really actually presented themselves as „independent in thinking” and they had high level of public self-consciousness. After this part of procedure, they describe themselves as more „independent in thinking” than in other conditions. The obtained results allow to state that the level of chronic public self-consciousness plays a significant role in the internalization of the presented behaviors and opens the field for further research in this direction.

  • Issue Year: XII/2017
  • Issue No: 43
  • Page Range: 406-415
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: Polish