A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Narratology of shock: affectivity and transgression in contemporary extreme fiction
Authors: Vanhanen, Tero Eljas
Publisher: De Gruyter
Publication year: 2026
Journal: Frontiers of Narrative Studies
Volume: 11
Issue: 2
First page : 333
Last page: 348
ISSN: 2509-4882
eISSN: 2509-4890
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/fns-2025-2025
Publication's open availability at the time of reporting: No Open Access
Publication channel's open availability : Partially Open Access publication channel
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1515/fns-2025-2025
Narrative fiction that aims for shock value exhibits two conflicting tendencies: it aims to be disturbing and repelling while simultaneously sparking readers’ fascination and drawing them closer. This dynamic is particularly fundamental for a subset of transgressive fiction we could call extreme fiction, ranging from prewar surrealist provocations to seedy 1970s exploitation and horror paperbacks to post-punk-influenced 1990s serial killer smashes and beyond to contemporary literary and popular fiction. These kinds of works embrace this contradiction through shocking representation of sadistic violence and sexual transgression that lures readers in precisely by being so nauseatingly repelling. In this article I analyze common affective narrative strategies that extreme fiction uses to simultaneously repel and fascinate readers. I examine how affective responses from readers are encoded into texts that often prefigure their reception by real readers. Drawing on several case studies, my analysis suggests that extreme fiction is anti-aesthetic by nature: through shock tactics, transgression of moral norms, and extreme themes it aims for affective responses that result in a puzzling combination of distaste and enjoyment in readers. Ultimately, I argue that extreme fiction forms a limit case of literature, which requires new narratological and aesthetic theorizing to make full sense of it.
Funding information in the publication:
This work is part of the research project AUTOSTORY: Authors of the Story Economy – Narrative and Digital Capital in the 21st-Century Literary Field (principal investigators Maria Mäkelä, Markku Lehtimäki & Kristina Malmio), funded by the Research Council of Finland 2024–2028 (funding decision 360931).