Revenge - a podcast by BBC World Service

from 2016-12-09T19:50

:: ::

The desire for vengeance – to harm those who’ve harmed you - is part of human nature. Whether it’s getting your own back on a cheating partner or settling a score with a childhood bully, many of us have considered retribution against the person who’s done us wrong. Yet often we decide not to act on that instinct.

So what motivates someone to take revenge and why did this kind of aggressive behaviour evolve? Mike Williams talks to a perpetrator who found it sweet and hears the tragic story of a victim of impossibly cruel revenge.Contributors:
“Annie”, who took revengeMichael McCullough, Professor of Psychology, Miami University
Dr David Chester, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth UniversitySarah Heatley, mother of Nina and Jack
Philippe Sands QC, International Human Rights lawyer and author, East West StreetProfessor Jack Levin, Co-Director, Brudnick Center on Violence and Conflict, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts

Presenter: Mike WilliamsProducer: Sally Abrahams

(Photo: White Voodoo doll with red pins on cork background. Credit: Shutterstock/Scott Rothstein)

Further episodes of The Why Factor

Further podcasts by BBC World Service

Website of BBC World Service