Schadenfreude in the Digital Public Sphere: A cross-national and decade-long analysis of Facebook news engagement
This research addresses the prevalence and dynamics of schadenfreude in digital discourse for social scientists and policymakers, providing cross-national insights but is incremental in mapping an understudied phenomenon.
The study tackled the problem of understanding schadenfreude in online news engagement by analyzing nearly one million Facebook comments over ten years across nine publishers in the U.S., U.K., and India, finding that schadenfreude is most frequent in moralized and political contexts, higher among right-leaning audiences, and more pronounced in India, with asymmetric relationships between political power and schadenfreude.
Schadenfreude, or the pleasure derived from others' misfortunes, has become a visible and performative feature of online news engagement, yet little is known about its prevalence, dynamics, or social patterning. We examine schadenfreude on Facebook over a ten-year period across nine major news publishers in the United States, the United Kingdom, and India (one left-leaning, one right-leaning, and one centrist per country). Using a combination of human annotation and machine-learning classification, we identify posts describing misfortune and detect schadenfreude in nearly one million associated comments. We find that while sadness and anger dominate reactions to misfortune posts, laughter and amusement form a substantial and patterned minority. Schadenfreude is most frequent in moralized and political contexts, higher among right-leaning audiences, and more pronounced in India than in the United States or United Kingdom. Temporal and regression analyses further reveal asymmetric relationships between political power and schadenfreude: left-leaning outlets display "power-licensed" schadenfreude that increases when their party governs, while right-leaning outlets exhibit "power-compensatory" schadenfreude that intensifies in opposition. Together, our findings move beyond anecdotal accounts to map schadenfreude as a dynamic, context-dependent feature of digital discourse, revealing how it evolves over time and across ideological and cultural divides.