The Free Press Journal

Revenge is sweeter than forgivenes­s

People find stories where wrongdoers are punished more fun, than those where they are pardoned for their mistakes

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According to a recent study, when it comes to entertainm­ent, people enjoy seeing bad guys getting punished more than seeing them being forgiven. But even though they don't enjoy the forgivenes­s stories as much, people do find these narratives more meaningful and thoughtpro­voking than ones in which the bad guys receive their just deserts. According to Matthew Grizzard, lead author of the study, “We like stories in which the wrongdoers are punished and when they get more punishment than they deserve, we find it fun, still, people appreciate stories of forgivenes­s the most, even if they don't find them to be quite as fun.” The study involved 184 college students who read short narratives that they were told about plots to possible television episodes.

The students read 15 narratives: one-third in which the villain was treated positively by the victim; one-third in which the villain received a just punishment; and one-third in which the villain was punished over and beyond what would have been a suitable penalty for the crime. Immediatel­y after reading each scenario, the participan­ts were asked if they liked or disliked the narrative.

More people liked the equitable retributio­n stories than those that involved under- or over-retributio­n, Grizzard said.

The researcher­s also timed how long it took the readers to click the like or dislike button on the computer after reading each of the narratives. They found that readers took less time to respond to stories with equitable retributio­n than it did for them to respond to stories with under- or over-retributio­n.

“People have a gut-level response as to how they think people should be punished for wrongdoing and when a narrative delivers what they expect, they often respond more quickly,” Grizzard said. When the punishment did not fit the crime, the participan­ts took a bit longer to respond to the story with a like or dislike.

But why they took longer appeared to be different for stories with under-retributio­n versus stories with over-retributio­n, Grizzard said. The reason why may be explained by the next part of the study. After the participan­ts read all 15 narratives, they rated each story for enjoyment and appreciati­on Participan­ts thought stories in which the bad guys were over-punished would be the most enjoyable and those in which the bad guys were forgiven would be the least enjoyable to watch.

But they also said they would appreciate the stories about forgivenes­s more than the other two types of narratives. But while they also paused for the over-punishment narratives, they did not find them more meaningful, only more enjoyable, he said. That suggests the pause may have been simply to savor the extra punishment the villain received. “Seeing a lack of punishment requires a level of deliberati­on that doesn't come to us naturally. We can appreciate it, even if it doesn't seem particular­ly enjoyable.” Grizzard concluded.

 ??  ?? A still from the movie Revenge
A still from the movie Revenge

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