Literature DB >> 20001120

Are specific emotions narrated differently?

Tilmann Habermas1, Michaela Meier, Barbara Mukhtar.   

Abstract

Two studies test the assertion that anger, sadness, fear, pride, and happiness are typically narrated in different ways. Everyday events eliciting these 5 emotions were narrated by young women (Study 1) and 5- and 8-year-old girls (Study 2). Negative narratives were expected to engender more effort to process the event, be longer, more grammatically complex, more often have a complication section, and use more specific emotion labels than global evaluations. Narratives of Hogan's (2003) juncture emotions anger and fear were expected to focus more on action and to contain more core narrative sections of orientation, complication, and resolution than narratives of the outcome emotions sadness and happiness. Hypotheses were confirmed for adults except for syntactic complexity, whereas children showed only some of these differences. Hogan's theory that juncture emotions are restricted to the complication section was not confirmed. Finally, in adults, indirect speech was more frequent in anger narratives and internal monologue in fear narratives. It is concluded that different emotions should be studied in how they are narrated, and that narratives should be analyzed according to qualitatively different emotions.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 20001120     DOI: 10.1037/a0018002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  5 in total

1.  When and Why Parents Prompt Their Children to Apologize: The Roles of Transgression Type and Parenting Style.

Authors:  Craig E Smith; Jee Young Noh; Michael T Rizzo; Paul L Harris
Journal:  J Fam Stud       Date:  2016-06-03

2.  The feeling of the story: Narrating to regulate anger and sadness.

Authors:  Monisha Pasupathi; Cecilia Wainryb; Cade D Mansfield; Stacia Bourne
Journal:  Cogn Emot       Date:  2016-01-08

3.  'I did try and point out about his dignity': a qualitative narrative study of patients and carers' experiences and expectations of junior doctors.

Authors:  Camille E Kostov; Charlotte E Rees; Gerard J Gormley; Lynn V Monrouxe
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-01-21       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Exploring trainer and trainee emotional talk in narratives about workplace-based feedback processes.

Authors:  A A Dennis; M J Foy; L V Monrouxe; C E Rees
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2017-04-29       Impact factor: 3.853

5.  The episodicity of verbal reports of personally significant autobiographical memories: vividness correlates with narrative text quality more than with detailedness or memory specificity.

Authors:  Tilmann Habermas; Verena Diel
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2013-08-19       Impact factor: 3.558

  5 in total

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