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Why we love horror stories(nautil.us)
16 points by dnetesn 6 days ago | 16 comments
  • strogonoff21 hours ago

    It is often under-appreciated how many of the stories that trace back to oral tradition—including those that we refer to as fairy tales—are actually horror stories.

    (I actually wonder if all of them were, to an extent, and whether the completely horror-free story experience is a relatively modern development.)

    Thought experiment: take the plot of a modern horror film (such as one of my recent favourites Nope) and imagine retelling it in a simplified fairy tale style, preserving the horrific events. What you end up with is much more like an original fairy tale, before the modern adaptations that made them “safe for children”.

    • deafpolygon21 hours ago |parent

      Or the inverse... a horror story version of Peter Pan or Tinkerbell...

  • throwaway2046a day ago

    https://archive.ph/tylO3

  • rramadass18 hours ago

    I effing hate horror movies/stories. I am not sure whether i am too psychologically sensitive or what, but i am different in this from most people i know. How people could produce and enjoyably watch slasher/Halloween/Scream/pointless-murder movies is beyond me.

    All of us have a nameless fear of the dread and a darkness inside and it seems to me these sort of movies/stories over-stimulate this part of our mind/brain which i don't think is healthy for the society and the individual.

    • saithound17 hours ago |parent

      I find mask-wearing men hiding in the shadows quite scary.

      But not nearly as scary as the person who generalizes "I personally dislike something" to "it must therefore be unhealthy for society and other individuals to enjoy it".

      The latter tends to kill more innocents in the long run.

      • rramadass14 hours ago |parent

        What an idiotic comment; especially the last line!

        The psychological effects of prolonged exposure to extreme gratuitous violence in horror films (the sub-genre of torture/sadism/slasher) are well known. The effects are quite detrimental (particularly in youngsters/teens) and in many cases long-lasting. They include Persistent Anxiety, Fearfulness, Avoidance, Obsession, Desensitization towards Violence (especially towards Women), Lack of Empathy, Nightmares, Sleeplessness etc.

        Scary movies can have lasting effects on children and teens, study says - https://record.umich.edu/articles/scary-movies-can-have-last...

        Psychological Effects of Horror Movies - https://edinazephyrus.com/psychological-effects-of-horror-mo...

        • saithoundan hour ago |parent

          > What an idiotic comment

          In my comment's defense, it at least didn't mistake an article from the Edina High School student newspaper for a scientific study conclusively demonstrating the effects of prolonged exposure to extreme gratuitous violence in horror films.

          • rramadassan hour ago |parent

            I purposefully chose the "Edina High School" article for you.

            I might also add that the details there are from certified Psychologists/Teachers employed by the School (AP Psychology teacher Heidi Mathers and Edina High School psychologist Samantha Bialozynski). It is highly relevant since it talks about the effects on school students/teens who are the primary market for the horror film genre. These psychologists have more data and are in a better position to observe behavioural changes day-to-day than in outside studies.

            I don't think you are capable of understanding more nuanced studies done by NIMH etc. However, i did give a well-respected and often-cited study by Kristen Harrison and Joanne Cantor in the other link. You are encouraged to read the original study (mentioned in the article) for edification.

  • deafpolygon21 hours ago

    I like horror stories because you can never truly predict the story. I am an avid reader, and well written horror stories (both paper and film variants) scratch that itch of novelty and "anything can happen". Most other fiction stories are often overly predictable, or heavily foreshadowed that I can kind of feel what's going to happen next.

    Some people thrive on routine and familiarity, and I'm the opposite (neophilia).

  • fractallyte19 hours ago

    Here's another perspective, from science fiction writer James H Schmitz, in the introduction to his book, A Pride of Monsters: https://web.archive.org/web/20010727131117/http://www.white-...

    Extract:

    "That was a period vastly longer than the civilization which has brought us a growing security against the beast that prowls by night. And the beast remains part of our heritage, unforgotten; it pads through the dark back-ways of our minds, peers out into our dreams. There is a kinship, a bond, between it and us. It's part of the raw substance of life; if necessary, we'll create new forms for it. As the original monsters of the environment dwindled into relative insignificance, man invented mythological terrors to replace them, new heroes to confront his inventions. It was as if he sensed a lack-and dragons and griffins, werewolves and vampires were born to hunt the outer dark again and restore to it what was missing."

  • jp57a day ago

    [flagged]

    • katzenverstehera day ago |parent

      I love them because they make reality seem nicer (in contrast).

    • throwup238a day ago |parent

      Wish fulfillment.

    • throwaway290a day ago |parent

      RTFA and find out?

      • kristenfrencha day ago |parent

        they're psychologically adaptive, an evolutionary gift, says Coltan Scrivener. He was fun to chat with.

        • throwaway290a day ago |parent

          What kind of lesson is that, encouraging people not to read the actual post!:)

          Did you chat face to face?