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Culture and Awe: Understanding Awe as a Mixed Emotion
PsychologyAffective Science

Culture and Awe: Understanding Awe as a Mixed Emotion

J. E. Stellar, Y. Bai, et al.

Recent cross-cultural work shows that awe—often celebrated as a positive emotion—can carry more fear in China than in the United States. Across a two-week daily diary and a standardized awe induction, Chinese participants reported greater fear while Americans reported more positive emotions, with heart rate reflecting cultural contrasts. This research was conducted by Authors present in <Authors> tag.... show more
Abstract
Recent work is establishing awe as an important positive emotion that offers physical and psychological benefits. However, early theorizing suggests that awe’s experience is often tinged with fear. How then, do we reconcile emergent positive conceptualizations of awe with its more fearful elements? We suggest that positive conceptualizations of awe may partially reflect modern Western experiences of this emotion, which make up the majority of participant samples when studying awe. To test whether awe contains more fearful qualities outside of Western cultures, we compared participants’ experiences of this emotion in China to those in the United States. In a two-week daily diary study (Study 1), Chinese participants reported greater fear than American participants during experiences of awe, but not a comparison positive emotion. In response to a standardized awe induction (Study 2), Chinese participants reported more fear, whereas American participants reported more positive emotions. Physiological changes in autonomic activity differed by culture only for heart rate, but not skin conduct-ance or respiratory sinus arrhythmia. These findings reveal that awe may be experienced as a more fearful, mixed emotion in China than in the United States and suggest that current positive conceptualizations of awe may reflect a disproportionate reliance on modern Western samples.
Publisher
Affective Science
Published On
Jun 25, 2024
Authors
Jennifer E. Stellar, Yang Bai, Craig L. Anderson, Amie Gordon, Galen D. McNeil, Kaiping Peng, Dacher Keltner
Tags
awecross-cultural differencesfear vs. positive emotiondaily diary studyphysiological measuresheart ratemixed emotions
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