Article
Details
Citation
Docherty D, Jasper C & Cullen M (2024) Out of sight, out of mind: how pescetarians manage dissonance by creating distance. Qualitative Research in Psychology, pp. 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1080/14780887.2024.2328037
Abstract
For many, there exists a cognitive inconsistency between the
practice of eating non-human animals and the belief that animals are morally relevant. This juxtaposition has fittingly been
described as the ‘meat paradox’. However, what can be said
about the decision to eat only the flesh of fish? The present
research seeks to understand what attitudes lead pescetarians
to remove terrestrial animals from their plate but still include
aquatic animals such as fish. Semi-structured interviews were
conducted with self-identifying pescetarians and analysed using
reflexive thematic analysis. Three themes are presented which
can be understood by reference to the construal-level theory of
psychological distance. Fish were perceived as distant on multiple dimensions which resulted in speciesist (the idea that some
species are more important and morally relevant than others)
attitudes toward marine animals’ capabilities and the justification of pescetarianism as a compromise between debates of
feasibility and ethical desirability
Keywords
Cognitive dissonance; construal-level theory; meat paradox; fish; pescetarian; psychological distance
Journal
Qualitative Research in Psychology
Status | Early Online |
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Publication date online | 14/03/2024 |
Date accepted by journal | 03/03/2024 |
URL | |
Publisher | Informa UK Limited |
ISSN | 1478-0887 |
eISSN | 1478-0895 |
People (1)
Tutor (ASF), Psychology