Psychological Processes Underlying Literary Impact

Abstract
Most psychological researchers now accept the premise that literary narratives have an effect on people s everyday lives. Contemporary research examines the types of psychological processes that give rise to literary impact. The article describes experiments in two broad areas. First, it supports a position called the willing construction of disbelief and relates that to readers feelings of having been transported to narrative worlds. The data suggest that readers must expend strategic effort to reject the information they acquire from literary narratives. Second, the article discusses the ways in which the unfolding of causes and consequences in literary narratives affect readers judgments and understanding of characters and outcomes. These experiments support the claim that readers may derive bodies of evidence from their literary experiences that they apply to their own life experiences.
Notes
ID: 364617792
Year of Publication
2004
Journal
Poetics Today
Volume
25
Issue
2
Pagination
265-281
Publication Language
English
ISBN Number
0333-5372
Gerrig, Richard J., and David N. Rapp. 2004. “Psychological Processes Underlying Literary Impact”. Poetics Today 25 (2): 265-281.
Journal Article