BloomInWinter
VIP Member
I read this tv trope site and was struck by the description of 'Woobies'. Though it does not state the origin of the woobie as being from the Michael Keaton Movie 'Mr. Mom' I think it is. ...and the description really describes so many sufferers.
The article drills down types of woobies and I've been like several at different times with different traumas.
I've been the stoic woobie, the iron woobie...and far too many others. Anyone else a Woobie?
The article drills down types of woobies and I've been like several at different times with different traumas.
A woobie (named for a child's security blanket) is that character you want to give a big hug, wrap in a blanket and feed soup to when he or she suffers so very beautifully. Woobification of a character is a curious, audience-driven phenomenon, divorced almost entirely from the character's canonical morality.
The Woobie's appeal lies in how it allows the audience to experience catharsis. The Greek philosopher Aristotle proposed that tragedy is popular because it allows people to experience and let out their negative emotions, "cleansing" themselves.
The Woobie is popular for this same reason. A story with The Woobie allows the audience to vicariously experience relief from some pain by fantasizing about relieving The Woobie's pain. (No, not that way! Well, okay, sometimes.) Woobification can also tie into a disturbing hurt/comfort dynamic, in which fans enjoy seeing the Woobie tortured, if only for the chance to wish the hurt away. This is often made manifest in the curious form of the Hurt/Comfort Fic.
An important aspect of The Woobie is that their suffering must have its genesis in external sources: a character, however sympathetically portrayed, who suffers as the result of their own actions is a Tragic Hero and does not qualify.
I've been the stoic woobie, the iron woobie...and far too many others. Anyone else a Woobie?