Publication date: April 2020
Source: Journal of Adolescence, Volume 80
Author(s): Julie C. Bowker, Miriam T. Stotsky, Hope I. White, Shanmukh V. Kamble
Abstract
Introduction
After years of neglect, there is now strong empirical interest in adolescents’ romantic experiences. Most studies, however, focus on adolescents’ romantic relationships in Western societies and fail to consider other-types of romantic experiences and adolescents who reside in non-Western societies.
Methods
The present study begins to address these research gaps by examining the social-behavioral and psychological concomitants of being viewed by many other-sex peers as a crush, or having high crush status, in a large (N = 445; 56% male; Mage = 13.77 years, SD = 0.43) longitudinal sample of young adolescents in urban India.
Results
Utilizing self- and peer-report data, results provide the first evidence that being viewed by many peers as an other-sex crush in India is related to some of the same (i.e., physical attractiveness), but also different (i.e., shyness) social-behavioral characteristics relative to what has been found in studies of young adolescents from the United States. Further analysis revealed new evidence regarding the unique social-behavioral (i.e., decreased physical aggression) and psychological (i.e., decreased social anxiety) outcomes associated with high crush status in urban India.
Conclusions
Taken as a whole, results underscore the importance of considering the larger cultural context in studies of young adolescents’ crush experiences.