2014
DOI: 10.1080/15205436.2014.923462
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Perceptions of Moral Violations and Personality Traits Among Heroes and Villains

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Cited by 41 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…Whereas Eden et al (2011) and Tamborini et al (2010) examined morality as a unified concept, Krakowiak and Oliver (2012) and Eden et al (2015) give reason to believe that evaluations of morally ambiguous characters are multidimensional rather than one dimensional. As such, a morally ambiguous character may have both positive and negative moral traits, whereas a less morally ambiguous character (i.e., a prototypical hero or villain) would demonstrate moral consistency across a variety of domains, either being all good or all bad.…”
Section: Morality Predicts Enjoyment 351mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Whereas Eden et al (2011) and Tamborini et al (2010) examined morality as a unified concept, Krakowiak and Oliver (2012) and Eden et al (2015) give reason to believe that evaluations of morally ambiguous characters are multidimensional rather than one dimensional. As such, a morally ambiguous character may have both positive and negative moral traits, whereas a less morally ambiguous character (i.e., a prototypical hero or villain) would demonstrate moral consistency across a variety of domains, either being all good or all bad.…”
Section: Morality Predicts Enjoyment 351mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…most past approaches to understanding characters have focused on heroes and villains (Eden et al, 2014;Eden et al, 2015;Hoffner & Buchanan, 2005;Tamborini, Grizzard, Eden, & Lewis, 2011). Yet, characters' morality is more complex than simple white hat-black hat conceptualizations of morality.…”
Section: Morality Predicts Enjoyment 351mentioning
confidence: 99%
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