Deakin University
Browse
rutherford-theuseofreader-2020.pdf (288.9 kB)

The use of reader response in the practice of readers and writers: A case study

Download (288.9 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-09-20, 00:00 authored by Michelle Mcrae, Leonie RutherfordLeonie Rutherford, Geoff BoucherGeoff Boucher
This paper reports on part of a larger study that used both creative and critical research methods to research the effects of textual strategies on reader response to a work of young adult fiction. A novel for young adults was crafted in order to test the hypothesis that that defamiliarizing narrative strategies ¬– such as those formerly associated with modernist novels – could provoke deep reading practice. We hypothesized that literature that that defamiliarizes, both in structural and contextual or ideological terms, imposes cognitive dissonance on its readers and provokes higher order inference making associated with deep reading. To test this, the researchers asked three teenagers to read the purposively created novel and to keep a reading journal progressively documenting their thoughts and reactions during the reading process. Analysis of these journals suggests that complex characters, spatial structure, and the defamiliarisation of narrative traditions all contributed to a deeper reading experience. Furthermore, the efficacy of untagged dialogue in provoking deep reading points to the importance of passages with withheld information and reduced narratorial guidance. This study investigated the reader response of small number of avid or engaged readers. However, the use of reader response diaries in conjunction with young adult fiction may provide a useful tool enabling English educators to analyse their students’ developing response to complex narrative strategies.

History

Journal

Synergy

Volume

18

Issue

2

Article number

411

Pagination

1 - 21

Publisher

School Library Association of Victoria

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

1448-5176

Language

English

Grant ID

N/A

Notes

Part of an ongoing program of empirical research on young people's reading practices, including the influences of genre and narrative preferences. The paper was revised from a doctoral thesis by creative artefact and exegesis by Dr Michelle McRae

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Related work

2.tRutherford, L. M., & McRae, M. (2019). Using modernist techniques to promote deep reading in Y.A. fiction.