@article{article_1760636, title={Inside Alex’s Mind: Language, Music, and Moral Engagement in A Clockwork Orange}, journal={Melius: Journal of Narrative and Language Studies}, pages={42–49}, year={2025}, DOI={10.62425/melius.1760636}, author={Kaplan, Necmettin}, keywords={Anthony Burgess, "Otomatik Portakal", Okur-Tepki kuramı, Nadsat, anlatı etiği}, abstract={This article examines Anthony Burgess’s A Clockwork Orange through the lens of Reader-Response Theory (Reception Theory, Reader-Oriented Criticism), particularly the perspectives of Wolfgang Iser and Stanley Fish. It argues that Burgess deliberately destabilizes moral judgment through first-person narration, the artificial language of Nadsat, and classical music. These formal strategies condition the reader’s response and implicate them in ethical reflection. Iser’s concepts of the implied reader (virtual reader, ideal reader) and interpretive gaps (indeterminacies, textual gaps), as well as Fish’s notion of interpretive communities (reading communities, discourse communities), are applied to show how Burgess guides interpretation while avoiding didacticism. This study investigates author/text and reader interrelation, and how the novel becomes not just a narrative of violence but a test of reader engagement and moral agency.}, number={4}, publisher={Atatürk Üniversitesi}