Threat and geographical distance: the case of North Korea
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Jan Prasil
, Maria Dudusova und Jan Auracher
Abstract
North Korea is considered by westerners to be a dangerous and unpredictable country and its leader, Kim Jong II, a mad dictator. After its nuclear test in October 2006, nervousness reached a new critical point. Yet first impressions gathered after this test showed that perceptions of this “rogue state” range widely among observers in the West and their Asian counterparts. The present research specifically assesses the fear of subjects from four countries, when confronted with the official press release after the event. Our hypotheses were that the perceived fear of North Korea would differ between subject groups of each country, and that it would increase in correlation to geographical distance. The results confirm the first hypothesis. The second, however, could not be verified.
Abstract
North Korea is considered by westerners to be a dangerous and unpredictable country and its leader, Kim Jong II, a mad dictator. After its nuclear test in October 2006, nervousness reached a new critical point. Yet first impressions gathered after this test showed that perceptions of this “rogue state” range widely among observers in the West and their Asian counterparts. The present research specifically assesses the fear of subjects from four countries, when confronted with the official press release after the event. Our hypotheses were that the perceived fear of North Korea would differ between subject groups of each country, and that it would increase in correlation to geographical distance. The results confirm the first hypothesis. The second, however, could not be verified.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction ix
-
Part I. Theoretical and philosophical perspectives
- Studying literature and being empirical: A multifaceted conjunction 7
- Empirical research into the processing of free indirect discourse and the imperative of ecological validity 21
- Notes toward a new philology 35
- A theory of expressive reading 49
-
Part II. Psychology, foregrounding and literature
- Textual and extra-textual manipulations in the empirical study of literary response 75
- Foregrounding and feeling in response to narrative 89
- Two levels of foregrounding in literary narratives 103
- Narrative empathy and inter-group relations 113
- Effects of reading on knowledge, social abilities, and selfhood: Theory and empirical studies 127
- Imagining what could happen: Effects of taking the role of a character on social cognition 139
-
Part III. Computers and the humanities
- An automated text analysis: Willie Van Peer's academic contributions 161
- Computationally Discriminating Literary from Non-Literary Texts 175
- Metaphors and software-assisted cognitive stylistics 193
- Searching for style in modern American poetry 211
- The laws governing the history of poetry 229
- Consolidating empirical method in data-assisted stylistics: Towards a corpus-attested glossary of literary terms. 243
-
Part IV. REDES Project: The new generation
- Empirical evaluation: Towards an automated index of lexical variety 271
- Language allergy: Myth or reality 283
- Proper names in the translation of The Lord of the Rings 297
- Threat and geographical distance: the case of North Korea 309
- The Apology of Popular Fiction: Everyday Uses of Literature in Poland 317
- Afterword. A Matter of versifying: Tradition, innovation and the sonnet form in English 329
- About the contributors 343
- Index of authors 351
- Index of keywords 355
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction ix
-
Part I. Theoretical and philosophical perspectives
- Studying literature and being empirical: A multifaceted conjunction 7
- Empirical research into the processing of free indirect discourse and the imperative of ecological validity 21
- Notes toward a new philology 35
- A theory of expressive reading 49
-
Part II. Psychology, foregrounding and literature
- Textual and extra-textual manipulations in the empirical study of literary response 75
- Foregrounding and feeling in response to narrative 89
- Two levels of foregrounding in literary narratives 103
- Narrative empathy and inter-group relations 113
- Effects of reading on knowledge, social abilities, and selfhood: Theory and empirical studies 127
- Imagining what could happen: Effects of taking the role of a character on social cognition 139
-
Part III. Computers and the humanities
- An automated text analysis: Willie Van Peer's academic contributions 161
- Computationally Discriminating Literary from Non-Literary Texts 175
- Metaphors and software-assisted cognitive stylistics 193
- Searching for style in modern American poetry 211
- The laws governing the history of poetry 229
- Consolidating empirical method in data-assisted stylistics: Towards a corpus-attested glossary of literary terms. 243
-
Part IV. REDES Project: The new generation
- Empirical evaluation: Towards an automated index of lexical variety 271
- Language allergy: Myth or reality 283
- Proper names in the translation of The Lord of the Rings 297
- Threat and geographical distance: the case of North Korea 309
- The Apology of Popular Fiction: Everyday Uses of Literature in Poland 317
- Afterword. A Matter of versifying: Tradition, innovation and the sonnet form in English 329
- About the contributors 343
- Index of authors 351
- Index of keywords 355