Suspense

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audience response measurement
Category=ATF
Category=CFA
Category=CFG
Category=DSA
Category=JBCC
Category=JMR
cognitive film theory
drama
E3 E4 E5 E6 E7
emotional engagement research
Empathetic Distress
Empathic Sensitivity
empirical media analysis
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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experience
film
free
High Security Ward
horror
Le Chiffre
Likable Protagonists
Macrostructural Information
Marion's Sister
Marion’s Sister
media psychology
narrative uncertainty
Physiological Indicator
Plot Unit
psychological mechanisms of suspense
scenes
sequence
Skin Conductance
Story Schemata
Structural Affect Theory
Subjective Emotion
Suspense Experiment
Suspense Fictions
Suspense Film
Suspense Scenes
Suspense Sequence
Suspense Text
suspenseful
Suspenseful Drama
Suspenseful Episodes
Temporal Omissions
texts
Tv Screen
university
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805819663
  • Weight: 612g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume begins with the general assumption that suspense is a major criterion for both an audience's selection and evaluation of entertaining media offerings. This assumption is supported not only by the popularity of suspenseful narratives, but also by the reasons users give for their actual choice of media contents. Despite this, there is no satisfying theory to describe and explain what suspense actually is, how exactly it is caused by films or books, and what kind of effect it has on audiences. This book's main objective is to provide that theory by bringing together scholars from different disciplines who are working on the issue. The editors' goal is to reflect the "state of the art" as much as it is to highlight and encourage further developments in this area.

There are two ways of approaching the problem of describing and explaining suspense: an analysis of suspenseful texts or the reception process. Researchers who follow the more text-oriented approach identify the uncertainty of the narrative outcome, the threat or danger for the protagonist, the play with time delay, or other factors as important and necessary for the production of suspense. The more reception-oriented scholar focuses on the cognitive activities of audiences, readers' expectations, the curiosity of onlookers, their emotions, and their relationships with the protagonists. A correspondence between the two seems to be quite difficult, though necessary to determine.

Both perspectives are important in order to describe and explain suspense. Thus, the editors utilize the thesis that suspense is an activity of the audience (reader, onlooker, etc.) that is related to specific features and characteristics of the text (books, films, etc.). Their question is: What kind of relation? The answer comes from finding out how, why, and which elements of the text cause effects that are experienced as suspense.

Scholars from semiotics, literary criticism, cultural studies, and film theory assess the problem from a text-oriented point of view, dealing primarily with the how and which. Other scholars present the psychological perspective by focusing on the cognitive and emotional processes that underlie viewers' experience of suspense; that is, the reception theory tries to answer the question of why suspenseful texts may be experienced as they are.

Peter Vorderer, Hans Jurgen Wulff, Mike Friedrichsen