This article introduces the special issue. In it, we argue that research into reader response
should be recognised as a vital aspect of contemporary stylistics, and we establish our focus
on work which explicitly investigates such responses through the collection and analysis of
extra-textual datasets. Reader response research in stylistics is characterised by a commitment
to rigorous and evidence-based approaches to the study of readers’ interactions with and
around texts, and the application of such datasets in the service of stylistic concerns: to
contribute to stylistic textual analysis and/or wider discussion of stylistic theory and methods.
We trace the influence of reader response criticism and reception theory on stylistics and
discuss the productive dialogues which exist between stylistics and the related fields of the
empirical study of literature and naturalistic study of reading. After offering an overview of
methods available to reader response researchers and a contextualising survey of existing
work, we argue that both experimental and naturalistic methods should be regarded as
‘empirical’, and that stylistics is uniquely positioned to embrace diverse approaches to
readers and reading. We summarise contributions to the special issue and the valuable
insights they offer into the historical context of reader response research and the way readers
perceive and evaluate texts (either poetry or narrative prose). Stylistic reader response
research enables both the testing and development of stylistic methods, in accordance with
the progressive spirit of the discipline, and also the establishment of new and renewed
connections between stylistic research and work in other fields
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