Resistance to the traditional gender rob expectation for modest self-presentation among women was examined in a pair of studies. In the first-which included U.S. and Polish college students of both sexes-making traditional gender rot expectations explicitly salient led to a significant reversal of traditional modest responding only among American women. A second study supported a rob rejection account of this finding by demonstrating that (a) U.S. women reacted much more negatively to the traditional gender role expectations for modesty than did comparable men, and (b) those women who reacted most negatively also evidenced the greatest role-inconsistent intentions. The possibility is discussed that seemingly ambivalent role behavior may not be a, result of role conflict but instead to the presence or absence of salient role-related stimuli.