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Low self-esteem? Avoid crime novels with surprise endings

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At 07:34 AM 3/15/2008, you wrote:

And, I'll just bet they got a big fat grant to come up with this juicy

tidbit...........

 

Low self-esteem? Avoid crime novels with surprise

endings

 

http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/low-self-esteem-avoid-crime-novels-with-surprise-endings-12129.html

 

Not everyone enjoys a murder mystery with a surprise ending, new research

suggests.

People who have lower levels of self-esteem prefer crime and detective

stories that confirm their suspicions in the end, while those with higher

self-esteem enjoy a story that goes against expectations.

“Personality plays a role in whether a person wants to be confirmed or

surprised when they read mysteries,” said Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick,

co-author of the study and assistant professor of communication at Ohio

State University.

“People with low self-esteem like to feel they knew all along who

committed the crime, probably because it makes them feel

smarter.”

But everyone seemed to enjoy mysteries where there were no strong hints

of how the story would end, the study found.

Knobloch-Westerwick conducted the study with Caterina Keplinger of the

Hanover University of Music and Drama in Germany . Their research was

published in a recent issue of the journal Media Psychology.

Researchers know very little about what makes various forms of crime

fiction popular or appealing to consumers, Knobloch-Westerwick said. This

study is an attempt to find out more about how a classic genre of fiction

appeals to different kinds of people.

The mystery and crime fiction genre draws large audiences, for example,

with the “Law & Order” TV series and best-selling novels by John

Grisham or Mary Higgins Clark.

The study involved 84 German college students. The students all took a

variety of written personality assessments. They then read a short,

one-page mystery story in German titled “Murder Because of Lust or

Greed?” The story was about a businessman who was murdered, with two

likely suspects: the victim's wife and his lover.

The students read one of three versions of the story. One version

presented both suspects as equally likely to have committed the crime. A

second version hinted that one of the suspects was more likely the killer

than the other, and that suspect was later revealed to have been guilty

(the confirmation ending). The third version also hinted that one suspect

was more likely to be the murderer, but in the end the killer turned out

to be the other woman (the surprise ending).

After reading the story, the participants rated how much they enjoyed the

resolution of the story. People with low self-esteem rated the surprising

ending as much less enjoyable than the confirmation ending. People with

high-self-esteem reacted in the opposite way, disliking being confirmed

and enjoying being surprised.

One implication from this is that the most popular mysteries would be

those with a high degree of uncertainty from the beginning, which don't

lead readers to expect a certain ending.

“Mysteries that thwart or confirm expectations in the end only pleased

some of the mystery readers,” she said.

Knobloch-Westerwick said while certain stable personality traits, like

self-esteem, influenced enjoyment of mysteries, there may also be

situational factors that have an effect.

“If you have a bad day at work that threatens your self-esteem, you might

enjoy a confirming mystery resolution more than you would normally,” she

said.

Students in the study who scored high on a measure of susceptibility to

boredom were slightly more likely to enjoy the story with high

uncertainty.

Participants in the study were also tested for “need for cognition” – the

tendency to enjoy thinking deeply about issues and situations in life.

Those that scored higher on a scale for need for cognition enjoyed the

story less than others, probably because this short story was rather

brief and simple, she said. They would probably enjoy a more complex

mystery plot.

Overall, Knobloch-Westerwick said mysteries probably appeal more to

people who enjoy thinking more than average.

“The mystery genre is one of the more complex genres,” she said.

“Mysteries have multiple suspects, and multiple possible motives, which

all add complexity. It is much different than a suspense story which just

has a good guy vs. a bad guy.”

From Ohio

State University

 

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