Filmmakers, composers, and playwrights carefully author the time dimension of their work. The feeling of a pregnant pause and an accelerando comes from viewers' experience of passing time. Those mediums express a few hours’ evolving experience—what about days, months, years? 
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Cultural institutions often author experiences that stretch over longer time scales (e.g. multi-year religious coming-of-age rituals). But mass mediums rarely do. That’s an unfortunate limitation: mass mediums give authors enormous reach!
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Books have a longer time dimension, but it’s generally unauthored. Books often take months to read. But they almost never have an *authored* time dimension like that of films or plays. The days and weeks are rarely specified by the author the way minutes are by a filmmaker.
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Replying to @andy_matuschak
I think you undersell the authored time dimension of a novel. If it exists in the other media you mention, then it definitely exists in a book.
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Replying to @matthewDmathias
Is there a particularly representative book in which you feel the author was strongly conducting the time dimension of the reader's experience over a long time period?
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Replying to @andy_matuschak
I pointed to the Odyssey. Beyond this, I think I’m having trouble understanding what you mean by strong conducting the time dimension. Can you help to understand better? My thinking is that a plot necessarily manipulates the reader along some time dimension to tell the story.
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Replying to @matthewDmathias
I think the Odyssey is a great example, but its interesting properties arise because it wasn't authored as a book! In general, book plots do manipulate the reader along time dimensions, but I think few intentionally design multi-month time scales as e.g. social institutions do.
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Replying to @andy_matuschak
Also curious to understand how playwrights accomplish what you mean
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I don't think playwrights generally do. Hard to think of a good example.
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