Schadenfreude
Why do we feel pleasure at someone else’s misfortune?
Schadenfreude is a German word that means “harm-joy”. It is the pleasure we feel from someone else’s misfortune, and it can come in many shades. It is the laughter we can’t stifle when someone unexpectedly falls over, or the triumphant pleasure we feel when a rival is defeated. We can also feel it when something bad happens to someone we genuinely like.
Edwina Pitman examines why, even when we’re happy and successful, we can’t help but enjoy others’ bad luck.
Contributors:
Esther Walker - journalist
Dr Tiffany Watt Smith - cultural historian and author of Schadenfreude: The Joy of Another’s Misfortune
Professor Richard Smith - professor of psychology, University of Kentucky
Dr Andre Szameitat - reader in psychology, Brunel University
Anuvab Pal - Comedian
Mike Wendling - Editor, ѿý Trending
Presented and produced by Edwina Pitman
Editor: Richard Knight
(Photo: Cheerful young woman lying on sofa with laptop in modern office lounge. Credit: Getty Images)
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- Mon 1 Jul 2019 12:32GMTѿý World Service except News Internet
- Mon 1 Jul 2019 17:06GMTѿý World Service Australasia
- Mon 1 Jul 2019 21:06GMTѿý World Service
- Tue 2 Jul 2019 01:32GMTѿý World Service
- Mon 8 Jul 2019 08:06GMTѿý World Service East and Southern Africa & East Asia only
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