Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience Donnah Canavan, a longtime faculty member whose writing and teaching centered around her concept of “social energy,” died on April 28. She was 79.
Visiting hours for Dr. Canavan will be May 3 from 4-7 p.m. at the , located at 2175 Massachusetts Avenue in North Cambridge, Nass. A funeral Mass will be celebrated on May 4 at 10 a.m. at in Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Dr. Canavan, who began her 51st year on the Boston College faculty
last fall, and also taught in the Woods College of Advancing Studies,
focused much of her research on social and personality psychology, in
particular interpersonal relations and well-being.
One of her
major interests involved what she called social energy: the dynamic that
arises from shared emotions and experiences among people who aren’t
necessarily acquainted with one another. Dr. Canavan saw the 2013
“Boston Strong” ethos as a prime example of social energy. As the city
sought to overcome the horror and trauma of the Boston Marathon
bombings, this expression of resilience was adopted by individuals and
organizations alike—including the Boston Red Sox, who would go on to win
the World Series in the fall.
Speaking with CBS Boston after the
Sox clinched the championship, Dr. Canavan—who had previously cited the
public interest in the birth of Britain’s Prince George as another
example of social energy—described the emotional ripple effect of social
energy: “You know that everyone is feeling the same way you are
feeling. It does something to validate your perception as a human, to
know that another human being—independent of you—sees and feels the same
way you do. You feel closer, more energetic, more purposeful.”
Social
energy can span emotional extremes, she added. The social energy that
initially arose from the bombings may have had negative foundations,
“but Boston Strong emerged from that.” The Sox found in Boston Strong a
perfect watchword to animate their efforts to rebound from a dismal 2012
season.
“A team that has a lot of social energy performs better,” she said.
In
1978, Dr. Canavan co-authored The Success-Fearing Personality: Theory
and Research, the result of a six-year study that sought to promote
understanding of the estimated 15 to 20 percent of Americans suffering
from a neurotic fear of success. This fear is manifested in an
unwillingness to take credit for success, an inability to achieve
success when it seems near, or an inclination to self-sabotage. In most
cases, according to the study, these people are entirely unaware that
they have ambivalent feelings about success, or are ruining their
chances of success.
The Success-Fearing Personality created a
more complete portrait of those fearing success. “They are common,
run-of-the-mill neurotics just like you and me,” said Dr. Canavan in an
interview with Boston College Colleague. She explained that
success-fearing does not dominate every aspect of an individual’s life,
and that even for many of those who self-sabotage, “it just takes a
little longer to get to the same place.” Nor is success-fearing a
handicap, she added: For example, success-fearers tended to fare better
in sports that require cooperation and teamwork than
non-success-fearers.
Dr. Canavan’s exploration of the human
psyche from both scientific and philosophical angles was reflected in
her class Positive Psychology. As she explained in a 2017 interview with
The Heights, she used a metric to quantify levels of health and
happiness, at the top of which was “flourishing,” which she likened to a
protective coating that fostered resilience in the face of setbacks.
The practice of mindfulness and positive behavior can lead a student to
flourish, and with the development of job skills, she said, offers a
path to happiness and fulfillment.
“Ever since I started teaching this class,” Dr. Canavan said, “I realized that being happy was fun.”
“I
learned from Dr. Canavan about the joy of living every moment of my
life with generosity, humility, and kindness,” said senior Giulianna
Rivera. “Dr. Canavan showed me the goodness in humanity that lifts
others up. Although she was fascinated with studying the social energy,
humility, and ‘pure goodness’ of others, she herself was the perfect
example of all these qualities. She lit up a room, created a dynamic
energy between her students, gave without expecting anything in return,
and focused more on those around her than on herself.”
Colleagues
also recalled Dr. Canavan’s generous and kind spirit, which Professor
James Russell encountered when he first arrived at the department—she
invited him to coffee and told him she looked forward to working with
him, and would buy him loaves of bread from a local bakery she
supported.
Senior Lecturer Gene Heyman received a similar
introduction to Dr. Canavan when he joined ֱ: “She invited me and
another new faculty member to lunch and we got a taste of her inimitable
style. Along with the expected pleasantries, we moved on to larger,
eventually quite personal topics: how we ended up in psychology, what
research issues most interested us, and—at about dessert time—our
favorite dreams. It was all in good humor, but also serious. She had a
probing mind.”
“Donnah had a lighthearted manner, yet also a deep
understanding of human interactions and how to bring out the best in
others,” said Psychology and Neuroscience Professor and Chair Elizabeth
Kensinger. “It is no wonder she chose to study social energy and shared
enthusiasm: She showed the power of that energy in her every
interaction. Donnah took a front-row seat at nearly every colloquium
talk, always asking thought-provoking questions. She was a beloved
mentor to undergraduate students who engaged with her on research
projects, their posters filling the hallways at the annual Psychology
Undergraduate Research Conference. Her longstanding commitment to her
students will reverberate her positive energy for many years to come.”
“She
had a genuine and refreshing enthusiasm for understanding the human
mind, and a welcoming attitude towards everybody,” said Assistant
Professor Stefano Anzellotti.
Office for Research Protections
Director Erin Sibley recounted Dr. Canavan’s enthusiasm for serving on
the University’s Institutional Review Board. “She may have been ֱ's
longest-serving IRB member, as she always asked to renew her term when
it was up. She truly enjoyed learning about the research going on across
the University, and was incredibly thoughtful in her commentary.
Whenever we had a particularly tricky study that didn't quite fit into
one person's area of expertise, Donnah was our go-to reviewer.”
Dr.
Canavan presented her research regularly at meetings of regional and
national psychology organizations. She was a long-time member of the New
England Psychological Association and served as the NEPA president in
2001.
A native of Cambridge, Dr. Canavan received a bachelor’s
degree from Emmanuel College and a doctorate from Columbia University.
She completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of
California-Los Angeles and earned a clinical psychologist license
following a fellowship at McLean Hospital in Belmont.
She is survived by her brother Peter.
Memorial
donations may be made in Dr. Canavan’s name to the Angell Memorial
Animal Medical Center, 350 So. Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 02130.
University Communications | April 2021