“…In order to address the problem of narrative relativity (Jones, ), we leverage Cultural Theory (CT) to populate our narratives with generalizable symbols, wording, and content. CT is an approach originally developed by Mary Douglas () and then further formalized to include grid/group dimensions of sociality, where group denotes the extent to which individuals prefer and associate in groups while grid denotes the extent to which those groups prescribe and constrain preferences and behavior (e.g., Moyer & Song, ; Ripberger, Song, Nowlin, Jones, & Jenkins‐Smith, ; Song, ; Song, Silva, & Jenkins‐Smith, ; Thompson, Ellis, & Wildavsky, ; Tumlison, Moyer, & Song, ). By intersecting the dimensions of grid and group, CT can be used to conceptually classify individuals as one of four cultural types: egalitarian (low grid/high group), hierarch (high grid/high group), individualist (low grid/low group), and fatalist (high grid/low group).…”