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12/04/2017 16:04

Beautifully sad

Dr. Anna Husemann Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für empirische Ästhetik

    A new study shows why we enjoy negative emotions in film and art.

    Why do we enjoy music, poems, novels and films that make us feel sad or even horrified? Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics have developed a new psychological model that explains this seemingly paradoxical phenomenon.

    Frankfurt – Recent research in the psychology of emotion has shown that negative feelings are particularly effective in capturing our attention, are experienced especially intensely, and enjoy privileged access to memory. Max Planck researchers working with Winfried Menninghaus, Director of the Department of Language and Literature at the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, were intrigued by these findings. After all, the arts precisely strive for what negative emotions are particularly good at: to secure attention, elicit intense subjective responses and to be memorable. Hence the researchers asked: Could it be that negative feelings are actually predestined resources for the arts rather than only paradoxical licenses in exceptional cases?

    Based on their psychological model published in the renowned journal Behavioral & Brain Sciences, the researchers have answered this question affirmatively. Their Distancing-Embracing model explains why we often experience artworks involving us in negative emotions as more intense, interesting, emotionally moving and less boring, and, indeed, often even as more beautiful than artworks lacking the spices of negative emotions.

    The model is based on two factors. The first has already been well studied: we cognitively subsume our exposure to works of art under a different category than our responses of day-to-day reality. This cognitive distancing creates a kind of protective space in which we can experience negative emotions.

    The second factor, the real heart of the new model, includes several mechanisms that allow us to embrace negative emotions in a thoroughly positive way. The first is based on the great importance of variation and dynamics in aesthetic experience: artistic compositions that involve us in interplays of positive and negative feelings are experienced as more varied, exciting and interesting. In addition, mixed feelings, in which positive and negative feeling intermingle, are of great importance for integrating negative emotions into an overall positive experiential pleasure. This explains why our experience of being deeply emotionally moved is positive and pleasurable, even if it also comprises sad feelings. Similarly, we cannot undergo positive, exciting feelings of narrative tension in the absence of feelings of “uncertainty”, worry and fear for protagonists.

    The aesthetic power of the representation itself (for example, the beauty of the music, the words, the language and colours) is also shown to render the experience of negative emotions both more intense and more positive. Finally, the search for meaning can result in discovering something positive in negative emotions.

    Thus, the Distancing-Embracing model explains the old “paradox of tragedy” of the enjoyment of negative emotions by combining recent discoveries in the psychology of emotion with basic principles of aesthetic perception. The model explains not only why we enjoy certain genres such as tragedies, horror films or melodramas. Rather, it proposes fundamental psychological mechanisms, which are responsible for the perception of works of art or media products altogether.

    Original publication:

    Menninghaus, W., Wagner, V., Hanich, J., Wassiliwizky, E., Jacobsen, T., & Koelsch, S. (2017). The Distancing–Embracing model of the enjoyment of negative emotions in art reception. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1-58. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17000309

    About the institute:

    The Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics was founded in 2013 in Frankfurt am Main and currently employs a staff of over 130. The Institute performs interdisciplinary research on what we find aesthetically pleasing, as well as who, why and under what conditions we are aesthetically pleased. The Institute’s research is split among the three Departments of language and literature, music, and neuroscience, and focuses on the processes underlying aesthetically judged perception and experience.
    The Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics is one of 83 Institutes of the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science, one of the leading organizations for basic research in Europe.


    More information:

    https://www.ae.mpg.de


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars
    Cultural sciences, Language / literature, Music / theatre, Psychology, Social studies
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

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