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1
Handbook of empirical literary studies
Kuiken, Don (Herausgeber); Jacobs, Arthur M. (Herausgeber); Kuiken, Donald (Herausgeber). - Berlin : De Gruyter, 2021
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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2
Kaleidoscope: A Phenomenological-Empirical Study of Beauty
Aaftink, Cathelein. - : University of Alberta. Comparative Literature., 2014
Abstract: Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ; Abstract: This doctoral project describes beauty as it is lived. It is an exploration of beauty’s experiential qualities as well as an investigation of its structural characteristics. Beauty has an eidetic structure that is morphological (rather than exact), which means that its essence has properties that are more or less characteristic (rather than necessary and sufficient) and that its phenomenal instantiations are similar in some ways (rather than being the same in all ways). Consequently, imaginative variation—a method that may be successfully employed when investigating exact essences—does not suffice when one seeks to uncover systematically the various meanings that may form part of a morphological essence. Instead it is more appropriate to: (1) consider multiple lived instances; (2) identify for each instance the lived understanding (i.e., sense of the whole) and lived meanings (i.e., parts) that played a role in that instance being experienced as an instantiation of its kind (or type); (3) examine in a dialectical manner instances that are relatively similar; and (4) combine insights obtained through the preceding whole-part analysis and dialectical explorations. It then becomes possible to describe a phenomenon in a way that is mindful of the different experiential-eidetic manifestations that may typify its nature. Following these procedural steps in the analysis of 471 personal experiences with beauty as recounted by first year psychology students has resulted in the description of the following lived variations of beauty: (1) a variation called objective beauty in which the experiencing individual responds to a thing of beauty that is experienced as distinctly separate from herself; (2) an affective-noetic variation in which beauty is lived in terms of a feeling or a certain state of mind; (3) a non-dualistic variation of beauty in which beauty is lived as a unified sense of the experienced and the way in which it is experienced; and (4) a variation called situative beauty in which beauty is experienced as involving all aspects of the situation that the experiencer finds herself in.
Keyword: Beauty; Empirical studies; Phenomenology
URL: https://era.library.ualberta.ca/files/1c18dg58c
http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.39851
BASE
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3
Kaleidoscope: A Phenomenological-Empirical Study of Beauty
Aaftink, Cathelein. - : University of Alberta. Comparative Literature., 2014
BASE
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4
Self-Modifying Experiences in Literary Reading: A Model for Reader Response
Fialho, Olivia da Costa. - : University of Alberta. Comparative Literature., 2012
BASE
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5
Self-Modifying Experiences in Literary Reading: A Model for Reader Response
Fialho, Olivia da Costa. - : University of Alberta. Comparative Literature., 2012
BASE
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6
The effects of personal involvement in narrative discourse
Louwerse, Max (Hrsg.); Kuiken, Don (Hrsg.); Eva-Wood, Amy L. (Mitarb.)...
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 38 (2004) 2, 169-286
BLLDB
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7
The Effects of Personal Involvement in Narrative Discourse
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 38 (2004) 2, 169-172
OLC Linguistik
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8
Locating Self-Modifying Feelings Within Literary Reading
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 38 (2004) 2, 267
OLC Linguistik
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9
Forms of self-implication in literary reading
In: Poetics today. - Durham, NC : Duke Univ. Press 25 (2004) 2, 171-203
OLC Linguistik
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10
What Is Literariness? Three Components of Literary Reading
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 28 (1999) 2, 121-138
OLC Linguistik
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11
The form of reading : empirical studies of literariness
In: Poetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 25 (1998) 6, 327-341
BLLDB
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12
Beyond text theory : understanding literary response
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 17 (1994) 3, 337-352
BLLDB
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13
Beyond Text Theory: Understanding Literary Response
In: Discourse processes. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 17 (1994) 3, 337-352
OLC Linguistik
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14
Foregrounding, Defamiliarization, and Affect: Response to Literary Stories [<Journal>]
BASE
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15
Beyond Text Theory: Understanding Literary Response [<Journal>]
BASE
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16
Foregrounding, defamiliarization, and affect : response to literary stories
In: Poetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 22 (1994) 5, 389-407
BLLDB
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17
The role of grammatical qualification in the expression and perception of emotion
In: Journal of psycholinguistic research. - New York, NY ; London [u.a.] : Springer 11 (1982) 6, 631-650
BLLDB
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18
Nonimmediate language style and inconsistency between private and expressed evaluations
In: Journal of experimental social psychology. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 17 (1981) 2, 183-196
BLLDB
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