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- Affective_disposition_theory abstract "Affective Disposition Theory(ADT), in its simplest form, states that media and entertainment users make moral judgments about characters in a narrative which in turn affects their enjoyment of the narrative. This theory was first posited by Zillmann and Cantor (1972), and many offshoots have followed in various areas of entertainment (Raney, 2006a). Entertainment users make constant judgments of a character's actions, and these judgments enable the user to determine which character they believe is the "good guy" or the "villain." However, in an article written in 2004, Raney examined the fundamental Affective Disposition Theory assumption that viewers of drama always form their dispositions toward characters through moral judgment of motives and conduct. Raney argued that viewers/consumers of entertainment media could form positive dispositions toward characters before any moral scrutinizing occurs. He proposed that viewers sometimes develop story schemas that provide them ‘‘with the cognitive pegs upon which to hang their initial interpretations and expectations of characters’’ (Raney, 2004a, p. 354). The basic idea of the Affective Disposition Theory is used as a way to explain how emotions become part of the entertainment experience.".
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- Affective_disposition_theory wikiPageRevisionID "597212727".
- Affective_disposition_theory hasPhotoCollection Affective_disposition_theory.
- Affective_disposition_theory subject Category:Articles_created_via_the_Article_Wizard.
- Affective_disposition_theory subject Category:Belief.
- Affective_disposition_theory subject Category:Ethical_theories.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Abstraction100002137.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Cognition100023271.
- Affective_disposition_theory type EthicalTheories.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Explanation105793000.
- Affective_disposition_theory type HigherCognitiveProcess105770664.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Process105701363.
- Affective_disposition_theory type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Theory105989479.
- Affective_disposition_theory type Thinking105770926.
- Affective_disposition_theory comment "Affective Disposition Theory(ADT), in its simplest form, states that media and entertainment users make moral judgments about characters in a narrative which in turn affects their enjoyment of the narrative. This theory was first posited by Zillmann and Cantor (1972), and many offshoots have followed in various areas of entertainment (Raney, 2006a).".
- Affective_disposition_theory label "Affective disposition theory".
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- Affective_disposition_theory sameAs Q4688888.
- Affective_disposition_theory sameAs Q4688888.
- Affective_disposition_theory sameAs Affective_disposition_theory.
- Affective_disposition_theory wasDerivedFrom Affective_disposition_theory?oldid=597212727.
- Affective_disposition_theory isPrimaryTopicOf Affective_disposition_theory.