People enjoy watching tragedy movies like
"Titanic" because they deliver what may seem to be an unlikely
benefit: tragedies actually make people happier in the short-term.
Researchers
found that watching a tragedy movie caused people to think about their own
close relationships, which in turn boosted their life happiness. The result was
that what seems like a negative experience -- watching a sad story -- made
people happier by bringing attention to some positive aspects in their own
lives.
"Tragic
stories often focus on themes of eternal love, and this leads viewers to think
about their loved ones and count their blessings," said Silvia
Knobloch-Westerwick, lead author of the study and associate professor of
communication at Ohio State University.
The key
is the extent to which viewers thought about their own relationships as a
result of watching the movie. The more they thought about their loved ones, the
greater the increase in their happiness. Viewers who had self-centered thoughts
concerning the movie -- such as "My life isn't as bad as the characters in
this movie" -- did not see an increase in their happiness.
Knobloch-Westerwick
said this study is one of the first to take a scientific approach to explaining
why people enjoy fictional tragedies that make them sad.
"Philosophers
have considered this question over the millennia, but there hasn't been much
scientific attention to the question," she said.
Knobloch-Westerwick
conducted the study with Yuan Gong, a graduate student, and Holly Hagner and Laura
Kerkeybian, both undergraduates, all at Ohio State. The results appear online
in the journal Communication Research and will appear in an upcoming print
edition.
The
study involved 361 college students who viewed an abridged version of the 2007
movie "Atonement," which involves two lovers who are separated and
die as war casualties.
Before
and after viewing the movie, the respondents were asked several questions which
measured how happy they were with their life.
They
were also asked before, after and three times during the movie to rate how much
they were feeling various emotions, including sadness.
After
the movie, participants rated how much they enjoyed the movie and wrote about
how the movie had led them to reflect on themselves, their goals, their
relationships and life in general.
What
people wrote about as a result of seeing the movie was a key in understanding
why people enjoy viewing fictional tragedies, Knobloch-Westerwick said.
People
who experienced a greater increase in sadness while watching the movie were
more likely to write about real people with whom they had close relationships,
she said.
This in
turn, increased participants' life happiness after viewing, which was then
related to more enjoyment of the movie.
"People
seem to use tragedies as a way to reflect on the important relationships in
their own life, to count their blessings," she said.
"That
can help explain why tragedies are so popular with audiences, despite the
sadness they induce."
The
researchers also tested the theory that people may feel more happiness after
viewing a tragedy movie because they compare themselves to the characters
portrayed and feel good that their own lives are not as bad. But that wasn't
the case.
People
whose thoughts after the movie were about themselves -- rather than about their
close relationships -- did not experience an increase in life happiness.
"Tragedies
don't boost life happiness by making viewers think more about themselves. They
appeal to people because they help them to appreciate their own relationships
more," she said.
But why
would people have to get sad by watching a tragedy to feel grateful about
relationships in their own lives?
Knobloch-Westerwick
said this fits with research in psychology that suggests negative moods make
people more thoughtful.
"Positive
emotions are generally a signal that everything is fine, you don't have to
worry, you don't have to think about issues in your life," she said.
"But
negative emotions, like sadness, make you think more critically about your
situation. So seeing a tragic movie about star-crossed lovers may make you sad,
but that will cause you to think more about your own close relationships and
appreciate them more."
Research
has also shown that relationships are generally the major source of happiness
in our lives, so it is no surprise that thinking about your loved ones would
make you happier, she said.
"Tragedies
bring to mind close relationships, which makes us happy."
Source:
Ohio State University
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