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The difference between texts that strongly emphasize one of these modes over the other may be illustrated with the example of a history review, in which the presentation of dates and events dictates an efferent reading, and a novel, in which the description and development of characters require an aesthetic reading.
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everything2.com/title/efferent+and+aesthetic+reading
everything2.com/title/efferent+and+aesthetic+reading
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Findings indicated that the reading experience must always include an aesthetic reading. However, the complete and thorough study of literature requires a balance between both aesthetic and efferent--a balance that begins with the aesthetic and slowly moves, when the students are ready, to the efferent.
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www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/recordDetail?accno=ED4535...
www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/recordDetail?accno=ED453545
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It is a dimension that leads from psychological aesthetics to general aesthetics. Readers bring to texts not simply critical preconceptions as Richards suggested, but dispositions as to how to read texts; they can choose between efferent and aesthetic reading (to use her powerful terms).
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www.hu.mtu.edu/reader/online/20/purves20.html
www.hu.mtu.edu/reader/online/20/purves20.html
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Making a distinction between efferent and aesthetic reading has important implications for the use of literature in the language classroom, particularly ...
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www.jstor.org/stable/3586604
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Based on the work of Rosenblatt, a reader's response to text has been conceptualized as lying on a continuum from an efferent to an aesthetic stance. Those assuming an efferent stance are described as detached and passive, with a focus on taking information away from the reading event.
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www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=77003495
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efferent and aesthetic reading purposes. An efferent site serves ... We found significant differences between sites whose primary ...
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portal.acm.org/ft_gateway.cfm?id=1012842&type=pdf
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Such a continuum resembles Louise Rosenblatt’s efforts to describe the difference between efferent and aesthetic reading. According to Rosenblatt, no reading event is ever purely aesthetic (for the pleasure of the experience) or efferent (for the purpose of obtaining information), but an interweaving of both.
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www.jacweb.org/Archived_volumes/Text_articles/V11_I2_Fl...
www.jacweb.org/Archived_volumes/Text_articles/V11_I2_Fleckenstein.htm
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She called one of them efferent -- meaning that you wanted to take something away from the reading with you to remember -- and the other aesthetic -- ... Now there may not seem to be much difference between reading Swift as an eighteenth-century Irishman and reading him as an eighteenth-century Englishman, at least in terms of...
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www.stthomasu.ca/~hunt/modes.htm
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We must distinguish between the processes that evoke the meaning, say, of a scientific report, and the processes that evoke a literary work of art. The distinction between such processes are discussed by Louise Rosenblatt in her transactional theory of reading and writing (1988, ... Examples of efferent/aesthetic reading...
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www.nnhermosa.net/articles/readers_stance.html
www.nnhermosa.net/articles/readers_stance.html
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