Friday, October 5, 2012

Audience Presentation Notes


Audience Invoked: usually positions the reader on the side of God, or good. Often his conflicts are God vs. the Devil, or good vs. evil. The name of the genre “horror” in which Stephen King writes provides its general purpose “to promote… a sense of horror” (Carroll). Carroll also says that “…to distinguish the horror story from mere stories with monsters, such as fairy tales, is the attitude of characters in the story to the monsters they chance upon. In works of horror, the humans regard the monsters that they encounter as abnormal. In fairy tales, on the other hand, monsters are part of the everyday furniture of the universe.” “In examples of horror, it would appear that the monster is an extraordinary character in our ordinary world, whereas in fairy tales and the like the monster is an ordinary character in an extraordinary world” (Carroll). The characters react in ways that we would expect them to in response to the monster (Carroll). Emotions of characters and audience are the same in horror (Carroll).

 

Audience Addressed: normal people who like horror and sci-fi. Definitely not literary critics; most critics don’t think much of his work.

 

How he established a relationship with his audience: provided good stories, and relatable characters

 

How he continued that relationship: maybe because of the genre he writes? Because horror allows the reader to feel the emotions of the characters it allows the reader to establish a kind of connection with King.

 

  • What do you think about when you think about horror?
  • If monsters are mentioned then point out that monsters are in fairy tales too. For example, the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk. Use this quote from Carroll to explain the difference: “…to distinguish the horror story from mere stories with monsters, such as fairy tales, is the attitude of characters in the story to the monsters they chance upon. In works of horror, the humans regard the monsters that they encounter as abnormal. In fairy tales, on the other hand, monsters are part of the everyday furniture of the universe.”

o   Also, another difference is that in horror the reader gets to feel the emotions from the character.

  • I’ve told you all of this so that I can tell you about King’s invoked audience. One of the traits of an invoked audience is that the author can put them in a particular place, such as on one side of a conflict. King sometimes presents an overall conflict of God vs. the Devil

o   Desperation

o   The Stand

  • King usually places his audience on the side of God. He does this by aligning us with the characters that represent God, and making us feel contempt for the characters that represent the Devil.

o   In The Stand the Devil character crucifies people for any crime where the God aligned characters welcome people with open arms.

  • King’s actual addressed audience is different

o   Addressed audience is basically anyone who likes horror and sci-fi type works. Definitely not literary critics.

  • So how did King establish this relationship with his invoked and addressed audiences?

o   He gave good story lines

o   He had relatable characters

o   Plot often has twists and turns

  • How did he continue that relationship?

o   Because he writes in horror he could have similar story lines

o   Still lets his reader connect with the emotions of characters

o   Tells the story through multiple character’s point of view

  • So Stephen King’s novels seem like he’s doing a lot of the same stuff and he is. But his genre allows him to do these things.

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