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Title page for ETD etd-06162009-153433


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Shafer, Daniel Mark
Author's Email Address dms05c@fsu.edu
URN etd-06162009-153433
Title The Role of Moral Disengagement in the Judgment of Characters and the Enjoyment of Violent Film
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Communication, Department of
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Arthur A. Raney Committee Chair
Barry S. Sapolsky Committee Member
Laura M. Arpan Committee Member
Jeannine E. Turner Outside Committee Member
Keywords
  • Factor Analysis
  • Moral Disengagement
  • Disposition Theory
  • Social Cognitive Theory
  • Integrated Theory of Crime Drama Enjoyment
  • Path Analysis
Date of Defense 2009-05-19
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
How human beings derive enjoyment from media is an ever-growing area of scholarship

in the media effects tradition of research. The importance of such research can be seen in the

potential effects the media people enjoy have on their lives. Of particular interest to scholars is

the way in which we form dispositions toward characters, deriving enjoyment from our favorite

heroes’ successes and cringing at their misfortunes. This dissertation examines the underlying

psychological mechanisms that drive disposition formation and maintenance. Based on the

disposition theory of drama (Zillmann & Cantor, 1976) and the integrated theory of crime drama

enjoyment (Raney & Bryant, 2002), the studies herein seek to introduce Bandura’s (1986)

concept of moral disengagement into a model for explaining enjoyment of violent audiovisual

narratives.

Study 1 addresses the problem of measurement of moral disengagement. An individual’s

tendency to morally disengage is thought to be an important factor in the moral judgments that

are rendered in regard to characters in drama. However, no previously existing scale is able to

measure such an individual difference in the context of violent media. Therefore a new scale was

constructed to measure media moral disengagement tendency (MMDT), or the tendency of an

individual to morally disengage from the actions of violent media characters.

Study 2 put the new MMDT scale to the test, assessing its power to predict moral

judgments of violent fictional characters in an experimental setting. Study 2 also investigated the

role of explicit moral disengagement cues in a film. In one version of the film, an explicit cue

was present (MDP), while it was absent in the second version of the film (MDA). In the MDP

condition, only punitiveness and vigilantism were significant predictors of moral judgments, and

only deservedness predicted enjoyment. In the MDA condition, only MMDT and gender were

predictors of moral judgments, and only victim sympathy was a predictor of enjoyment. Results

indicate that the presence or absence of an explicit moral disengagement cue determines what

moral judgments influence enjoyment, and which individual difference variables influence those

moral judgments. It is proposed that schema theory can provide an explanation for this finding.

MMDT, it would appear, only operates in the absence of an explicit moral disengagement cue,

when the schema for crime drama/action is not activated. The findings have implications for

disposition theory and the integrated theory of crime drama enjoyment. Suggestions for future

research are offered.

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