Abstract

A considerable amount of attitudinal research in the area of race relations has been devoted to examining racial prejudice and related factors within the dominant group in this society. Relatively little research, however, has dealt with racial antipathies from the minority position, except to investigate minority response during times of overt racial conflict. The present research deals with the specific issue of racial hostility-here defined as a feeling of resentment or antagonism directed toward another racial group'-from the black perspective. Previous field investigations which have included measures of this or related concepts among blacks include: Marx (1964), Brink and Harris (1967), Bogue and McKinlay

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