AESTHETIC EFFECTS OF LITERARY READING AND IMPACTFUL DREAMS. Don Kuiken University of Alberta

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AESTHETIC EFFECTS OF LITERARY READING AND IMPACTFUL DREAMS Don Kuiken University of Alberta

OVERVIEW Spell out an expressivist conception of aesthetic genesis Present evidence that sublime feeling is a lingering effect of the aesthetic genesis that occurs Through impactful dreams Through absorbed literary reading Suggest directions for subsequent research

AESTHETIC RESPONSE: PLEASURE Aesthetic response minimally involves epistemic interest, which can be distinguished from Satiating pleasure, e.g., the pleasure of slaking one s post-basketball thirst (Silvia, 2010; Panksepp & Biven, 2012) Non-satiating pleasure, e.g., the joy of holding one s grandson (Koelsch, Jacobs, Menninghaus, et al., 2015) The pleasure of processing fluency, e.g., the satisfaction of passively disambiguating a multistable figure (Winkielman et al, 2006)

AESTHETIC RESPONSE: EPISTEMIC INTEREST Interested elaboration during sustained balance between fluency and disfluency (Graf & Landwehr, 2015; Csikszentmihalyi, 1990) But not elaboration understood as judgments-withclosure (Leder et al., 2004), e.g., explicit intra-textual assertions, explicit contextualizing assertions

A NEW REFUTATION OF TIME Time is a river that carries me along, and I am the river; It is a tiger that devours me and I am the tiger; It is a fire that consumes me and I am the fire. Borges (1946)

AESTHETIC RESPONSE: INTEREST Interested elaboration during a sustained balance between fluency and disfluency (Graf & Landwehr, 2015; Csikszentmihalyi, 1990) But not elaboration understood as judgments-withclosure (Leder et al., 2004), e.g., explicit intra-textual assertions, explicit contextualizing assertions Rather, elaboration as explicating judgments supportive of category development (categorial intuition; Husserl, 1983; Natanson, 1998)

A NEW REFUTATION OF TIME Time is a river that carries me along, and I am the river; It is a tiger that devours me and I am the tiger; It is a fire that consumes me and I am the fire. Borges (1946)

OUTCOMES OF AESTHETIC GENESIS: SUBLIME FEELING Not sublime feeling as a particular kind of emotion (e.g., melancholy, elevation) Not sublime feeling as response to particular stimulus properties (e.g., natural spectacle) But rather, sublime feeling as the combination of An inexpressible recognition/realization An absence, either within disquietude or enthrallment A shift toward self-perceptual depth

EMPIRICAL INDICES OF SUBLIME FEELING The Experiencing Questionnaire (EQ; Kuiken, Campbell, & Sopčák, 2012) Sublime Disquietude: The interactive combination of Inexpressible Realizations, Self-perceptual Depth, Perceived Discord Sublime Enthrallment: The interactive combination of Inexpressible Realizations, Self-perceptual Depth, Wonder

Aesthetic Outcomes Sublime Disquietude Self-perceptual Depth Sample Item I felt sensitive to aspects of my life that I usually ignore Inexpressible Realizations What seemed clear to me also seemed beyond words Perceived Discord I felt profoundly ill-at-ease Sublime Enthrallment Self-perceptual Depth I felt sensitive to aspects of my life that I usually ignore Inexpressible Realizations What seemed clear to me also seemed beyond words Wonder I felt deeply astonished

THE AESTHETIC BACKGROUND: STUDIES OF IMPACTFUL DREAMS Two previous studies of literary reading (Kuiken, Campbell, & Sopčák, 2012) found that: Sublime disquietude was greater following reading of Celan s Death Fugue, Owen s Exposure, Blanchot s The Instant of My Death, and Levi s The Black Stars. Sublime enthrallment was greater following reading of Shelley s Mont Blanc, Coleridge s Frost at Midnight, Rilke s First Duino Elegy, and Eliot s Little Gidding Are the carry-over effects of some dreams comparable to reading Death Fugue, etc.? Are the carry-over effects of some dreams comparable to reading Mont Blanc, etc.?

IMPACTFUL DREAM TYPES (KUIKEN & SIKORA, 1993; BUSINK & KUIKEN, 1996) Transcendent dreams involve: Vivid tactile-kinesthetic imagery, spreading warmth, unusual forms or sources of light, felt vitality, flying and floating, magical accomplishment, perspective shifts, and awe and ecstasy during dream endings Existential dreams involve: Vivid tactile-kinesthetic imagery, light/dark contrasts, ineffectual movement (fatigue), separation and loss, spontaneous affective shifts, and agonizingly sad dream endings Nightmares involve: Vivid tactile-kinesthetic imagery, vivid or unusual sounds, metamorphoses, energetic activity, harm avoidance, and intensely frightening dream endings

RESEARCH DESIGN (LEE & KUIKEN, 2015) 158 participants who remembered at least one dream/month (including at least one impactful dream) Participants recorded a dream that was as impactful as their most impactful dream within the preceding month By completing the 26-item Impactful Dreams Questionnaire (IDQ; Kuiken, 2009), which enabled classification of nightmares (n=38), existential dreams (n=47), transcendent dreams (n=35), and mundane dreams (n=38) And by completing a dream-specific version of the Experiencing Questionnaire (EQ)

DREAM TYPE DIFFERENCES: EFFECTS ON SUBLIME FEELING (STUDY 1) Sublime Enthrallment Sublime Disquietude Mundane dreams (n = 38) Transcendent dreams (n = 35) Nightmares (n = 38) 1.37 c 2.23 a 1.53 c 1.77 b 1.46 b 2.38 a 2.02 b 2.46 a Existential dreams (n = 47) abc Means with different superscripts (within rows) differ significantly from each other (p <.05; LSD)

RESEARCH DESIGN (KUIKEN & HARTMANN, IN PREPARATION) 215 participants who remembered at least one dream/month (including at least one impactful dream) Participants recorded a dream that was as impactful as their most impactful dream within the preceding month By completing the 26-item Impactful Dreams Questionnaire (IDQ; Kuiken, 2009), which enabled classification of nightmares (n=38), existential dreams (n=47), transcendent dreams (n=35), and mundane dreams (n=38) And by completing a dream-specific version of the Experiencing Questionnaire (EQ)

DREAM TYPE DIFFERENCES: EFFECTS ON SUBLIME FEELING (STUDY 2) Sublime Enthrallment Sublime Disquietude Mundane dreams (n = 63) Transcendent dreams (n = 31) Nightmares (n = 50) 1.23 b 1.39 a 1.23 b 1.31 a 1.25 c 1.34 b 1.39 b 1.53 a Existential dreams (n = 64) abc Means with different superscripts (within rows) differ significantly from each other (p <.05; LSD)

THE AESTHETIC BACKGROUND: STUDIES OF LITERARY READING Two previous studies of literary reading (Kuiken, Campbell, & Sopčák, 2012) found that: Sublime disquietude was greater following reading of Celan s Death Fugue, etc. Sublime enthrallment was greater following reading of Shelley s Mont Blanc, etc. Are the aftereffects of some forms of absorbed reading comparable to reading Death Fugue, etc.? Are the aftereffects of some forms of absorbed reading comparable to reading Mont Blanc, etc.?

TYPES OF ABSORBED READING (SIKORA, KUIKEN & MIALL, 2011; KUIKEN & DOUGLAS, IN PRESS); FIALHO & KUIKEN, IN PREPARATION Expressive Enactment involves: Pre-enactive Empathy, Peripersonal Space, Selfimplicating Givenness Integrative Comprehension involves: Cognitive Perspective-taking, Extrapersonal Space, Narrative Realism Reactive Engagement involves: Alternative Perspectives, Side Participation, Explanatory Revision

Latent Variables (with Miniscales) Expressive Self-implicating Givenness Enactment Integrative Comprehension Reactive Engagement Peri-personal Space Pre-enactive Empathy Realistic Conduct Affective Realism Cognitive Perspective-taking Extra-personal Space Alternative Perspective Side Participation Explanatory Revision Sample Item Remembering experiences in my own life helped me to sense what the character was going through I could almost feel what it would be like to move or change position in relation to the things (objects, characters) in the story world For a moment I felt like I was the character described there This character s actions seemed similar to what I observe people doing in real life The character s feelings, attitudes, and concerns seemed life-like I could understand events in the story from the perspective of each different character I could see (in my mind s eye) the same setting (or environment) that was there for a character to see I identified with someone other than the character described in that part of the story I felt close enough to the situation to think I understood it better than a character did I thought about how this part of the story might have unfolded differently

RESEARCH DESIGN (KUIKEN & DOUGLAS, IN PRESS) 365 participants were asked to read an excerpt from the novella On Chesil Beach (McEwan, 2008). After reading, participants were asked to Write recursively and expressively about their experience of a pivotal (preselected) passage Describe their reflections using (1) a preliminary version of the Absorption-like States Questionnnaire (ASQ; Kuiken & Douglas, in press) and (2) selected items from the EQ (Kuiken, Campbell, & Sopčák, 2012)

KUIKEN & DOUGLAS (IN PREPARATION) Differential prediction of aesthetic ( expressive and narrative ( story-driven ) outcomes (Study 1): Besides Sublime Disquietude, Being Moved Explanatory Coherence and Causal Explanation A replication of the preceding pattern (Study 2) A critique of story-driven situation models in cognitive studies of literary reading (e.g., Zwaan, 2014; Zwaan & Radvansky, 1998) Affirmation of the distinctively aesthetic outcomes of expressive enactment during literary reading

RESEARCH/SCHOLARLY PROSPECTS Differential prediction of Sublime Disquietude and Sublime Enthrallment, perhaps depending on text selection (e.g., Death Fugue, Mont Blanc) Differential prediction of aesthetic (sublime feeling) and pragmatic (attitude change) effects of literary reading Differential prediction of response to metaphoric constructions during and after absorbed literary reading and after impactful dreaming

Don Kuiken Department of Psychology P217 Biological Sciences Bldg. University of Alberta Edmonton, AB T6G 0C6 CANADA kuiken@ualberta.ca