| Literature DB >> 23386837 |
Christian Obermeier1, Winfried Menninghaus, Martin von Koppenfels, Tim Raettig, Maren Schmidt-Kassow, Sascha Otterbein, Sonja A Kotz.
Abstract
Metrical patterning and rhyme are frequently employed in poetry but also in infant-directed speech, play, rites, and festive events. Drawing on four line-stanzas from nineteenth and twentieth German poetry that feature end rhyme and regular meter, the present study tested the hypothesis that meter and rhyme have an impact on aesthetic liking, emotional involvement, and affective valence attributions. Hypotheses that postulate such effects have been advocated ever since ancient rhetoric and poetics, yet they have barely been empirically tested. More recently, in the field of cognitive poetics, these traditional assumptions have been readopted into a general cognitive framework. In the present experiment, we tested the influence of meter and rhyme as well as their interaction with lexicality in the aesthetic and emotional perception of poetry. Participants listened to stanzas that were systematically modified with regard to meter and rhyme and rated them. Both rhyme and regular meter led to enhanced aesthetic appreciation, higher intensity in processing, and more positively perceived and felt emotions, with the latter finding being mediated by lexicality. Together these findings clearly show that both features significantly contribute to the aesthetic and emotional perception of poetry and thus confirm assumptions about their impact put forward by cognitive poetics. The present results are explained within the theoretical framework of cognitive fluency, which links structural features of poetry with aesthetic and emotional appraisal.Entities:
Keywords: aesthetics; cognitive fluency; emotion; meter; poetry; rhyme
Year: 2013 PMID: 23386837 PMCID: PMC3560350 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Stimulus examples (Brentano, .
| Real word stanzas | Pseudo-word stanzas |
|---|---|
| Holdes Bitten, mild Verlangen, | horbef dickel, lirg selmanem, |
| wie es süß zum Herzen spricht! | hie esch wüss psul helpsem strift! |
| Durch die Nacht, die mich umfangen, | gulf bie lask, bie lis unschalem, |
| blickt zu mir der Töne Licht! | drickt pfu nil bel pöle rift! |
| Holdes Bitten, mild Begehren, | horbef dickel, lirg gedehlel, |
| wie es süß dem Herzen klingt! | hie esch wüss bel helpsem trimp! |
| Durch die Nacht, die mich umfangen, | gulf bie lask, bie lis unschalem, |
| blickt zu mir der Töne Licht! | drickt pfu nil bel pöle rift! |
| Holdes Bitten, mildes Verlangen, | horbef dickel, linbech selmanem, |
| wie es süß mir zum Herzen spricht! | hie esch wüss nil psul helpsem strift! |
| Durch die Dunkelheit, die mich umfangen, | gulf bie gulpenheip, bie lis unschalem, |
| blickt zu mir dieser Töne Licht! | drickt pfu nil biechel pöle rift! |
| Holdes Bitten, mildes Begehren, | horbef dickel, linbech gedehlel, |
| wie es süß mir im Herzen klingt! | hie esch wüss nil psul helpsem trimp! |
| Durch die Dunkelheit, die mich umfangen, | gulf bie gulpenheip, bie lis unschalem, |
| blickt zu mir dieser Töne Licht! | drickt pfu nil biechel pöle rift! |
Example for the modification of meter and rhyme in the stimulus material (Brentano, .
| Original stanza(metered/rhyming) | Non-metered/non-rhyming version of the stanza | Manipulation |
|---|---|---|
| Holdes Bitten, | Holdes Bitten, | Modification of adjective, substitution of noun |
| wie es süß | wie es süß | Addition of pronoun, substitution of preposition, and verb |
| Durch die | Durch die | Substitution of noun |
| blickt zu mir der Töne Licht! | blickt zu mir dieser Töne Licht! | Modification of article |
The modified words are represented in italics.
Statistical values (mean, range) across the critical, final words of each line for all stimulus conditions.
| Mean pitch (Hz) | Max pitch (Hz) | Min pitch (Hz) | Duration (s) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real words | Metered | Rhyming | 84.30 (range: 79.07) | 95.66 (range: 142.81) | 74.36 (range: 65.33) | 0.51 (range: 0.69) |
| Non-rhyming | 84.02 (range: 62.38) | 94.31(range: 79.82) | 74.54 (range: 83.69) | 0.51 (range: 0.75) | ||
| Non-metered | Rhyming | 82.89 (range: 127.71) | 97.29 (range: 175.27) | 69.50 (range: 104.02) | 0.51 (range: 0.71) | |
| Non-rhyming | 82.90 (range: 108.51) | 95.79 (range: 153.57) | 69.52 (range: 104.97) | 0.51 (range: 0.80) | ||
| Pseudo-words | Metered | Rhyming | 83.63 (range: 57.95) | 94.43 (range: 113.88) | 73.85 (range: 80.52) | 0.51 (range: 0.66) |
| Non-rhyming | 83.38 (range: 54.70) | 93.52 (range: 79.48) | 74.24 (range: 79.04) | 0.51 (range: 0.72) | ||
| Non-metered | Rhyming | 81.46 (range: 86.72) | 94.83 (range: 147.94) | 69.10 (range: 87.45) | 0.51 (range: 0.66) | |
| Non-rhyming | 81.80 (range: 111.68) | 94.30 (range: 131.80) | 69.58 (range: 102.12) | 0.52 (range: 0.77) |
Stimulus material – list of stanzas.
| Author | Stanza |
|---|---|
| Avenarius | Abend |
| Brentano | Abendständchen |
| Brentano | Am Tage vor dem Abendmahl |
| Brentano | Ich wollt‘ ein Sträußlein binden |
| Bürger | Resignation. Nach der Rowe |
| Bürger | Robert |
| Celan | Ich trau mich nicht mehr mit Flöten |
| Dauthendey | Immer neue Küsse gib |
| Eggert-Schwarten | Ausschnitt aus Gegenwart |
| Eichendorff | Der frohe Wandersmann |
| Eichendorff | Der Morgen |
| Eichendorff | Klage |
| Fontane | Trost |
| Fontane | Wer schaffen will, muß fröhlich sein |
| George | Es zuckt aus grauem wolkenzelt |
| George | Geführt vom sang der leis sich schlang |
| Gleim | Daphne an den Westwind |
| Goethe | An Geheimerat von Willemer |
| Goethe | An Silvien |
| Goethe | Leichte Silberwolken schweben |
| Hauff | Steh‘ ich in finstrer Mitternacht |
| Herwegh | An einen Bekannten, der einen Orden erhalten hatte |
| Hesse | Nacht im Odenwald |
| Hofmannsthal | Die Beiden |
| Keller | Nacht im Zeughaus. 1 |
| Kleist | Hier von der Welt geschieden |
| Kolmar | Die Fremde |
| Kraus | Vor einem Springbrunnen |
| Lappe | Verheimlichung |
| Lenau | Blick in den Strom |
| Lenau | Mein Herz |
| Lenau | Veränderte Welt |
| Liliencron | Für und für |
| Liliencron | Ist das alles? |
| Loerke | Abend auf der Grand‘ Place in Brüssel |
| Marx | Darum laßt uns alles wagen |
| Meyer | Die Lautenstimmer |
| Miller | Der Frühling |
| Morgenstern | Nach Norden |
| Mörike | Begegnung |
| Rilke | Der Schauspieler |
| Rilke | Die Sprache der Blumen Stachelbeere (Ribes grossularia) |
| Rilke | Friedhofsgedanken |
| Rilke | Ich lieb ein pulsierendes Leben |
| Rilke | Vorwärts |
| Ringelnatz | Es war einmal ein Kannibale |
| Ringelnatz | Morgenwonne |
| Schiller | Der Antritt des neuen Jahrhunderts |
| Schiller | Für Sophie Nösselt |
| Schwab | Das Neckarthal bei Canstatt. Auf eine Landschaft von Steinkopf |
| Storm | Herbst |
| Storm | Herbst (2) |
| Storm | Im Herbste 1850 |
| Storm | Liebesklage eines Verschmähten (2) |
| Tieck | An einen Liebenden im Frühling 1814 |
| Tieck | Frühe Sorge |
| Uhland | An einem heitern Morgen |
| Wedekind | Frühling – Ilse |
| Werfel | Der Weltfreund versteht nicht zu altern |
Figure 1Results for the “liking” rating. The (A) shows the main effect of meter, whereas the (B) shows the main effect of rhyme.
Figure 2Results for the “intensity” rating. The (A) illustrates the main effect of lexicality, the middle one (B) the main effect of meter, and the right one (C) shows the main effect of rhyme.
Figure 3Results for the “perceived emotion” rating. The (A) shows the main effect of rhyme, whereas the (B) depicts the interaction of lexicality and meter, with the left part showing the main effect of meter for real world stanzas and the right part showing the main effect of meter for pseudo-word stanzas.
Figure 4Results for the “felt emotion” rating. The left part shows the main effect of rhyme for the real word stanzas, whereas the right part depicts the main effect of meter for the pseudo-word stanzas.