Authors
Ron Tamborini, Allison Eden, Nicholas David Bowman, Matthew Grizzard, René Weber, Robert Joel Lewis
Publication date
2013/5/1
Journal
Mass Communication and Society
Volume
16
Issue
3
Pages
325-346
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
Zillmann's moral sanction theory defines morality subcultures for entertainment as groups of media viewers who evaluate character actions with shared value systems. However, the theory provides no a priori means to identify these shared value systems. The model of intuitive morality and exemplars incorporates a theoretical framework for identifying and testing the factors from which these shared value systems emerge. This study applies the model's framework, based on 5 “moral domains” from moral foundations theory, to test the influence of shared value systems on character perceptions and narrative appeal. A within-subject experiment varied violation of these five domains (care, fairness, ingroup loyalty, authority, and purity) and narrative resolutions (positive or negative outcomes) in 10 short narrative scenarios. The 5 domains predicted character perceptions and narrative appeal. The results are discussed …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Tamborini, A Eden, ND Bowman, M Grizzard… - Mass Communication and Society, 2013