91快色

Feb. 17, 2015

Revenge isn鈥檛 always sweet, but it can be beautiful

Susan Boon, Faculty of Arts, writing in Conversation Canada
 Agathe LM/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND
Agathe LM/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

You鈥檝e probably heard the saying 鈥渞evenge is sweet,鈥 and the tales of revenge that receive the most media attention typically do have an element of victory in the narrative (, the woman who chopped off her ex-husband鈥檚 penis after he sexually assaulted her, easily comes to mind.)

Less commonly discussed are the smaller, everyday acts of revenge that people commit, and how they feel about it. This sort of revenge still affects people, but it seems as if the universal 鈥渟weetness鈥 of revenge is probably, at least to some extent, a product of popular mythology.

About 20 years ago, we started conducting research on revenge after noticing that people often struggle with forgiveness 鈥 even forgiving the people they love. In most relationships, people usually want to feel like they鈥檙e getting a fair deal, and revenge is one recourse they have if they feel they鈥檝e been slighted.

Some forms of revenge do make the perpetrator feel better, though it鈥檚 usually not as 鈥渟weet鈥 as imagined. A number of other factors influence how people feel about committing revenge, from how it鈥檚 crafted to the target鈥檚 reaction.

More bittersweet than sweet

For the most part, research on revenge has focused on  and  . These studies have mapped out  that looks rather different from the image often portrayed in popular media; it鈥檚 rarely as violent or dramatic as it appears to be on TV, in movies and in literature.

There鈥檚 good reason: Public acts of revenge can make a person  or criminally , whether it鈥檚  or . Instead, revenge often involves breaking the typical rules of a relationship: not returning a text message or phone call, purposefully being unreliable or being less affectionate.

Many brood about getting revenge because they think it will make them feel better. Unfortunately, most people  how they鈥檒l feel in the future. , one group of participants was asked to imagine how they would feel if they could punish the people who didn鈥檛 cooperate in a game. The other group was allowed to actually punish those who didn鈥檛 cooperate. The people in the group that imagined taking revenge consistently thought it would feel better than the actual punishers found it to be.

It鈥檚 not that there aren鈥檛 any positive experiences associated with getting revenge 鈥 . It just doesn鈥檛 feel as good for as long as many people think it would.

In fact,   indicate that people experience a range of positive and negative emotions when contemplating revenge.

So rather than revenge being either bitter or sweet, it鈥檚 more likely that revenge is bittersweet.

Revenge: A dish best served鈥ymmetrically?

At least two factors determine whether a person feels good or bad about revenge.

One is how 鈥渂eautiful鈥 or aesthetically pleasing the act of revenge seems. , researchers asked a group of MBA students to tell two stories they personally knew about a time that they (or someone they knew) had taken revenge on a coworker.

They felt much better about some stories than others 鈥 those that appealed to a person鈥檚 sense of duty, like when someone might 鈥渢ake one for the team鈥 and go after a coworker who was mistreating everyone; acts that were especially well-tailored to the offense (say, getting a coworker who constantly took credit for other people鈥檚 work fired by sabotaging the very work that the freeloader had been taking credit for); or those that had symmetry between the offense and the act of revenge, with each having similar consequences. (For example, imagine a manager of a computer store who sets unusually strict standards for cleanliness, and constantly keeps the workers on the job past the end of their shift; to get revenge, the workers are extra meticulous about cleaning every last shelf, drawer and corner so they can keep the manager on duty longer than he or she wants.)

The other factor that influences how people feel about revenge is the target鈥檚 reaction.

, participants played a problem-solving game with an assistant who was instructed to take more than a fair share of the winnings (in this case, raffle tickets). In return, the participants could punish the assistant by removing some of the raffle tickets from the assistant without the possibility of gaining any for themselves. The researchers found that people reported feeling more satisfied about punishing the assistant when, after meting out the punishment, they received a message from the assistant saying 鈥淵our decision to subtract my raffle tickets has probably something to do with my distribution. It was unfair, I know.鈥

The researchers say that the satisfaction 鈥 the 鈥渟weetness鈥 of revenge 鈥 comes from knowing that the act of revenge changed the offender in some way. If the participants witnessed that change, they felt more capable of influencing the other person鈥檚 attitude or actions.

So in order for revenge to be enjoyable, the way it is crafted, performed and responded to seem to matter. The best kinds make people feel like they are living in a better, more controllable and fair world. Others 鈥 especially those that make people feel regret, don鈥檛 change the offender or result in lopsided amounts of harm 鈥 are probably not as sweet as you鈥檇 imagine them to be.