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The Cultivation of Idealistic Moral Expectations: The Role of Television Exposure and Narrative Engageability
Authors:Helena Bilandzic  Cornelia Schnell  Freya Sukalla
Institution:1. Department of Media, Knowledge and CommunicationUniversity of AugsburgORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9694-9653;2. Department of Media, Knowledge and CommunicationUniversity of Augsburg;3. Institute of Media and Communication StudiesLeipzig UniversityORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4611-3647
Abstract:The aim of this study was to gain a better understanding of how fictional television shapes people’s expectations about the moral workings of the real world, relying on cultivation theory and models of narrative and moral effects as theoretical frameworks. Using a cross-sectional sample of the general German adult population, this study investigated the relationship between television viewing time (overall television and three genres—crime drama, medical drama, sitcoms) and narrative engageability with three idealistic moral expectations (just world beliefs, professional altruism of doctors, tolerance of otherness). Although genre viewing was not related to idealistic moral expectations, overall television viewing and narrative engageability proved to have consistent positive relationships. Results indicate that television viewing, the audience’s eagerness to engage with narratives (narrative engageability), and moral expectations about the real world are intertwined and mutually dependent.
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