A rose by any other name: A social-cognitive perspective on poets and poetry

Maya Bar-Hillel*, Alon Maharshak, Avital Moshinskyt, Ruth Nofech

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Evidence, anecdotal and scientific, suggests that people treat (or are affected by) products of prestigious sources differently than those of less prestigious, or of anonymous, sources. The "products" which are the focus of the present study are poems, and the "sources" are the poets. We explore the manner in which the poet's name affects the experience of reading a poem. Study 1 establishes the effect we wish to address: a poet's reputation enhances the evaluation of a poem. Study 2 asks whether it is only the reported evaluation of the poem that is enhanced by the poet's name (as was the case for The Emperor's New Clothes) or the enhancement is genuine and unaware. Finding for the latter, Study 3 explores whether the poet's name changes the reader's experience of it, so that in a sense one is reading a "different" poem. We conclude that it is not so much that the attributed poem really differs from the unattributed poem, as that it is just ineffably better. The name of a highly regarded poet seems to prime quality, and the poem becomes somehow better. This is a more subtle bias than the deliberate one rejected in Study 2, but it is a bias nonetheless. Ethical implications of this kind of effect are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)149-164
Number of pages16
JournalJudgment and Decision Making
Volume7
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2012

Keywords

  • Categorization
  • Expectations
  • Experience
  • Focusing illusion
  • Label effects
  • Poetry
  • Priming
  • Reputation bias

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