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Then the angry young man was on the screen and acting out the actor of the popular culture, the anger of the population, the anger of the good Indian citizen.Ġ6:07 Subhra Priyadarshini: That is Imke Rahamani, a historian of emotions so to say.
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And I found that actually it was with the new wave cinema that the trope of the angry young man came up for filmmakers.
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All the things that drive anger seem to have had a resurgence in the recent past.Ġ5:33 Subhra Priyadarshini: Indian cinema, as it turns out, is both a reflection of the anger of the masses and a driver of it.Ġ5:41 Imke Rajamani: I started really to study the history of anger in popular films. So early in the 20th century, people like Le Bon actually talked about the cloud psychology and the psychology of the masses and this kind of understanding of how negative emotions get amplified and transmitted in society became a matter of concern. arm.Ġ5:01 Sanjeev Jain: Negative emotions like anger and hostility has the potential of whipping a large number of people into frenzy. And on the other hand, anger is pretty infectious. Overstimulation itself can break down psychological defenses.Ġ4:47 Subhra Priyadarshini: So on one hand, we are overloaded with information in our hyper connected digital world. But when there is a flood of emotional data or sensory data, those mechanisms can get disrupted. Now human beings develop this very complex relationship between our so called neocortex or our frontal lobes, which regulates or understands or tries to interpret every emotional experience, rationalise it, compartmentalise it and regulate it. If you've watched primetime news, or one of the latest blockbusters are just scrolled down through your Twitter of Facebook feed, it certainly seems so, doesn't it?Ġ4:04 Sanjeev Jain: Obviously, the propensity to have so called basic emotions, like anger, fright, fear, are innate to almost all animals that have a central nervous system. Not being able to express anger can actually be quite damaging for the psyche.Ġ3:40 Subhra Priyadarshini: Our question to Sanjeev Jain was, while humans are genetically the same as they were hundreds or thousands of years ago, is the general population just getting angrier than ever.
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After all, along with fear, it drives the fight or flight response.Ġ3:26 Sanjeev Jain: So as psychiatrists we understand that anger is as legitimate an emotion as happiness is. Throughout evolution, anger has had an adaptive role in survival. Indeed, inappropriate levels of anger are associated with many psychiatric conditions, and health conditions too. And these symptoms in these patients very often have to do with hostility and anger.Ġ2:56 Subhra Priyadarshini: That is Sanjeev Jain, a professor at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bengaluru.
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Our major research is on the genetics and neurobiology of severe mental illness, mainly schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. These kinds of negative emotions, whether it's untoward anger, hostility or sadness began being codified as symptoms of psychiatric illness sometime in the 19th century. Let's find out.Ġ2:22 Sanjeev Jain: So emotional states broadly, can simply be defined as positive and negative emotions. In this highly connected digital age, how our films, social media and algorithms shaping our emotions. But what's behind those flared nostrils the rapid heart rate, what's happening when you shout at the top of your voice, or slam the door behind you? In this episode of the Nature India podcast, we are exploring the science of anger and much more. We are genetically programmed to recognise it. Rage, wrath, fury, outrage, whatever you want to call it. But also it's because anger is a universal emotion. That is the testament to the power of Bollywood. It probably didn't take you too long to identify Amitabh Bachchan’s voice in these clips from some of his super hit Hindi movies. Now what do I mean?Ġ0:55 (Amitabh Bachchan’s angry dialogues from two Hindi movies.)Ġ1:16 Subhra Priyadarshini: The quintessential angry young man. This episode we are seeing red with a clinical neuroscientist, a Bollywood historian and a computational biologist. Speakers: Sanjeev Jain, Imke Rajamani, Tavpritesh Sethi, Subhra PriyadarshiniĠ0:01 Partner announcement: This episode is produced with support from DBT Wellcome Trust India Alliance.Ġ0:26: Subhra Priyadarshini: This is your host Subhra Priyadarshini and you are listening to the Nature India podcast.