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Juan Carlos - by spain01

Schadenfreude: The World’s worst sin?

November 4th 2006 20:36
Job
Job Mocked by his Friends


The word is German and has begun to appear with increasing frequency in popular literature and television, West Wing, Simpsons and Two and a Half Men. There is no exact equivalent in English. It means taking pleasure in the suffering of others. Schaden means damage and freude means joy. Nothing distinguishes the attitude and morality of the 19th Century from that of present times than this word which was thought to convey something so horrible that German Clerics thought it should be banned. The ability to experience Schadenfreude characterizes the psychopath more than any other attribute. It enables to torturer to do his work.


In Abu Ghraid prison the American soldiers showed a capacity not only to inflict suffering and to enjoy it but also to want to record their responses and those of their victims. The perpetrators were damaged types, the excrement of modern American society with its religiose and perverse “home town” values.

Schadenfreude is now expected from the victims of crime. When a criminal is convicted the media sees it as its duty to record the victim’s joy at the suffering that is about to be inflicted on the criminal and in some states of the US, family members are invited to watch the execution. The response, “I hope he burns in hell,” is an invitation to experience Schadenfreude because it is assumed that the speaker will derive satisfaction during the process of endless suffering.


Schadenfreude excludes forgiveness. There will be no forgiveness because that will afford the forgiven party the chance to move on and enjoy his life. He has brought it upon himself, let him suffer and in knowing that he suffers, we can derive satisfaction that our decisions and our judgments are correct. His suffering gives us power and rather than experience a moment of regret that we have caused another to suffer we can say again and again to those who reproach us for the harshness of our decisions, “He brought it upon himself.” It is this attribution to the perpetrator of the crime that frees us from guilt. The power and decision of judges and tribunals is tainted with Schadenfreude.

We are all tainted with Schadenfreude. We all experience it and now in modern society we are encouraged in it. Once or twice in our lives we have the good fortune to encounter someone who is free of it. Such people appear to us illuminated in the light of compassion and understanding. We should treasure them.


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11 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by Damo

November 4th 2006 23:25
Excellent post.

I always put Killing People for Profit at the top of my most evil list. However I think after reading your post Schadenfreude shares the winning post. I had heard someone say that people who are capable of doing great evil have no empathy for their victims.

Comment by spain01

November 5th 2006 10:33

Comment by Anonymous

November 11th 2006 16:46
I have a friend that takes great pleasure in driving over cane toads with his car, next time he does it im going to shout out "you sick schadenfreude'r"

Comment by Adrian

November 11th 2006 19:03
Schadenfreude was my second guess for Ag's blog, dammit!! I should have guessed it anyway, for the sake of your promised reward.

I'm curious what would have happened had the German clerics succeeded. What would it mean if (a) the word were driven underground, rendered taboo; or (b) the word were eliminated completely, and we had no single noun to replace it?

Comment by spain01

November 12th 2006 01:06

Comment by spain01

November 12th 2006 01:09
The word would have suffered a fate similar to f##k and c##t which were excluded from dictionaries until late last century and there would have been offences for using the word and in the German context it was to be an offence to take satisfaction in one’s public utterances in the misery of others. Impossible to police of course so the idea was a little silly after all but a good attempt on the part of the Germans to eliminate this kind of emotion.

Comment by Anonymous

November 14th 2006 07:02
In the picture you have posted It appears the old man is pointing the finger at job saying up yours as job suffers(maybe he was the first to use this finger gesture), that painting really expresses the old man getting his schadenfreud jollys. could you explain a little of the story behind that painting of which you've titled "Job mocked by his friends" for what reasons did they make that man suffer.

Comment by spain01

November 14th 2006 20:42
The Book of Job is one of the Books of the Bible. Job is a wealthy man and very virtuous. God allows the devil to put this to the test by taking all of his possession and afflicting him with illness. Despite this Job repeatedly refuses to curse the name of God. The book is framed as a beautiful poem and is one of the most remarkable books of the bible. Job is eventually restored. Part of the poem contains the speeches by the friends depicted who are later commanded by God to repent their castigations.

Comment by ag

November 19th 2006 03:01
Hi Juan, great post. I had never heard of the word, perhaps it’s closest translation in English would be sadism? What is most interesting is that the authorities wanted it banned, as if there is the relationship between the act and the word is more than arbitrary. Would banning a word, such as the word rape, help eliminate the crime?

I enjoyed reading your ideas about compassion – the antonym of schadenfreude. Aristotle said about compassion something like this: while many of us might consider ourselves compassionate, once heightened feelings like fear, anger or desperation come into play, it is much harder to express that solicitude, and it often disappears. To be truly compassionate is to retain compassion no matter how heated we get, and to eventually learn to balance all our emotions so that they don't dictate.

Like you say, maybe we are all more susceptible to gaining pleasure from suffering than we like to think. But if you ask me it doesn’t count as schadenfreude with cane toads. They’re hideous creatures and everyone knows they’re really fun to drive over.


Comment by Always Eighteen

December 7th 2006 17:41
I should read this blog more.

This entry reminds me of this widow a priest at my local church talked about. She visited her husband's murderer in prison every week before he died.




I long to, and at the same time fear the time I'll meet someone with a pure, forgiving heart.

Comment by spain01

December 9th 2006 03:39
For enlightenment on this issue please read the story of Sodom and Gomorrha in the Bible and the question that Lot poses to God about the good men who are reason no to destroy the city.

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