An Inclination for Intimacy: Depictions of Mental Health and Interpersonal Interaction in Popular Film

Authors

  • Julius Matthew Riles University of Missouri
  • Michelle Funk Pennsylvania State University
  • Brandon Miller University of Massachusetts–Boston
  • Ethan Morrow University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Keywords:

mental health, interaction analysis, film

Abstract

One of the most potent influences on normative interpersonal behaviors is entertainment media (e.g., film). Evidence has long suggested that the portrayal of individuals managing mental health concerns is associated with erratic and violent behavior. Such health-framing tendencies could influence consumers’ mental models, prototype scripts, and other behavioral expectations about social interaction involving someone with a mental health condition. To date, however, no prior study has provided an interaction analysis of discrete instances of social engagement in popular media as they pertain to interactions involving someone who is managing mental illness relative to those interactions that do not. Here, we undertake this task, observing disproportionate schematic associations of mental illness with relatively more intimacy—in terms of topic, setting, and relationship types, among other characteristics—within film with mental health portrayal emphases. Implications for these patterns are discussed.

Author Biographies

Julius Matthew Riles, University of Missouri

Assistant Professor, Communication(573) 882-4431 

Michelle Funk, Pennsylvania State University

Assistant Teaching Professor, Communication(814) 865-3461

Brandon Miller, University of Massachusetts–Boston

Assistant Professor, Communication(617) 287-3144

Ethan Morrow, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Doctoral Student, Communication(217) 333-2683

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Published

2021-04-29

Issue

Section

Articles