Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hello. This is 6 Minute English  from BBC Learning English. I'm Sam.

  • And I'm Neil. When Helen Russell  was three years old, her new-born

  • baby sister died suddenly. Looking  back at that sad time, Helen remembers

  • making a big decisionshe wanted  to be happy. She became a bestselling

  • author and wrote a book called, The  Atlas of Happiness. She got married,

  • and even moved to the famously  happy city of Copenhagen in Denmark.

  • But the sadness Helen felt didn't  disappear, and the longer she lived abroad,

  • the more she wondered whether her  feelings were somehow connected to

  • being born in England, into a culture  where, traditionally, expressing your

  • emotions was discouraged.

  • In this programme, we'll be  investigating how the way people express

  • sadness is influenced by their  culture, and, as usual, we'll be

  • learning some new, useful vocabulary as well.

  • But first I have a question for  you, Neil. In English there are

  • many idioms which describe being  sad, including down in the dumps,

  • meaning that you feel miserable  and depressed. Also, emotions are

  • often associated with colours, for  example you might go red with anger,

  • or turn green with envy. But which  colour is associated with sadness? Is it:

  • a) yellow? b) blue? or, c) brown?

  • I think the answer is blue.

  • OK, Neil. We'll find out  the later in the programme.

  • Around the world, cultures  express emotions very differently.

  • In Spain, flamenco performers  express their emotions with

  • colourful displays of song and dancewhereas in Japan, crying is considered

  • weak and shameful. To discover more  about how British people express their

  • feelings, Helen Russell interviewedThomas Dixon, a professor at the Centre

  • for the History of Emotion, for BBC  World Service programme, The Documentary:

  • The word sad, as you will know, Helenliterally means sated or full. So,

  • its earliest use is in English, it means  being literally fed up, being full of

  • something sad or sated means heavy  and full. And then of course we

  • have this huge vocabulary of melancholysorrow, grief, depression and

  • many, many other terms, and they  all mean slightly different things.

  • Professor Dixon explains that the  original meaning of the word sad was

  • 'full' or fed up – a phrase which  today means being unhappy, bored or

  • tired of something which has been  going on a long time. For example:

  • everyone is fed up of Covid.

  • But fed up is just one of many words  to describe feelings of sadness,

  • each with a slightly different meaningOne of them is melancholy, a kind

  • of intense and thoughtful sadnessAnother is grief - a strong sadness often

  • caused by the death of someone you love.

  • In Irish culture, melancholy is  expressed artistically in poems or songs.

  • And in other cultures, India for examplegrief can be expressed by professional

  • mourners who are paid to cry by the  family of the person who has died.

  • In England, however, big public  displays of emotion are uncommon.

  • But according to Professor Dixon  that wasn't always the case. Here he

  • explains to BBC World Service programmeThe Documentary, how it was only

  • quite recently, during the time of Queen  Victoria and the British Empire, that

  • the English got a reputation for being repressed  - unable to show their true feelings and emotions.

  • By and large it's a Victorian, and then  Edwardian, and 20th century characterization.

  • As you can imagine, it fits with the era  of empire, of white British men going

  • around the world conquering it, and having  a stiff upper lip and ruling over the

  • peoplein other parts of the world, and  believing themselves, the white Europeans,

  • to be superiorand one sign of  that superiority, and Darwin writes:

  • Englishmen rarely caught cry except  under the pressure of the acutest grief.

  • Professor Dixon says the Victorians who  ran the empire had a stiff upper lip.

  • These men believed they were better than  everyone else, and that to cry was a sign of

  • weakness. When we cry, our top lip starts  to wobble and so this gave rise to the

  • idiom a stiff upper lip, meaning to not  show your feelings when you are upset,  

  • even though it is difficult not to.

  • Fortunately, most Brits are less repressed  nowadays, but it's still hard for

  • some people, especially men, to express  their feelings. Sometimes drinking

  • alcohol gives people the courage to say  what they are feeling, but this is not

  • so healthy and can even  increase feelings of depression.

  • It's talking to someone about your  feelings that can really help, and keep

  • away the bluesand in saying thatthink I've answered your question, Sam.

  • I asked Neil which colour is  often associated with feeling sad.

  • And I said it was blue

  • Which wasthe correct answer, and it  gives us another idiom about sadness

  • feeling blue. OK, let's recap the  vocabulary we've learned from this programme

  • about the emotion of sadness, or in  other words, feeling down in the dumps.

  • If you are fed up of something, you're  unhappy, bored, or tired of it, especially

  • if it's been happening a long time.

  • Melancholy is a type of intense and  thoughtful sadness; and grief is a strong

  • sadness usually caused by someone's death

  • The adjective repressed means unable to  show your true feelings and emotions.

  • And finally, the uniquely British idiomto keep a stiff upper lip, means not to

  • show your feelings when you're upseteven though it is difficult not to.

  • Hiding you feelings definitely won't make you happy,

  • but making friends and learning something  new might, so remember to join us

  • again soon, here at 6 Minute English. Bye for now!

  • Bye!

Hello. This is 6 Minute English  from BBC Learning English. I'm Sam.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

B1 US

文化(How culture affects sadness - 6 Minute English)

  • 32 1
    joey joey posted on 2023/04/17
Video vocabulary