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Language and Literature
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Foregrounding and refamiliarization: understanding readers' response to literary texts

Olívia da Costa Fialho

University of Alberta, Canada, ofialho{at}ualberta.ca

The present study investigates the effects of foregrounding on the process of defamiliarization of students of literature and engineering, and on the way they develop refamiliarization, that is, the reconstructive process they undergo in order to return to familiar ground. It describes which refamiliarizing strategies these readers make use of and the role of feeling in this process. Data analysis is both quantitative and qualitative. The introspective method of the pause protocol is used in the qualitative part. Here, participants respond to the reading of a short story. The purpose is to investigate how they react to its content and which of its segments trigger comments. Results demonstrate that appreciating the formal elements of a text might be an effective strategy, as readers do not try to decode the text any longer and start reflecting on it, thus building an interpretation. They also develop a new perspective on the world around them and on themselves.

Key Words: affect • education • emotion • empirical studies • feelings • literary reading • reader-response

Language and Literature, Vol. 16, No. 2, 105-123 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0963947007075979


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