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  1. The history of emotions is a field of historical research concerned with human emotion, especially variations among cultures and historical periods in the experience and expression of emotions. Beginning in the 20th century with writers such as Lucien Febvre and Peter Gay , an expanding range of methodological approaches is being applied.

  2. No one really felt emotions before about 1830. Instead, they felt other things – ‘passions’, ‘accidents of the soul’, ‘moral sentime nts’ – and explained them very differently from how we understand emotions today. Some an cient G reeks believed a defiant rage was carried on an ill wind.

  3. According to the literature, no one really felt emotions before about 1830. Instead, they felt other things — ‘passions’, ‘accidents of the soul’, ‘moral sentiments’ — and ...

  4. Taken together, these three contributions make for a fuller and more accurate account of ideas about emotion during the century stretching from 1855 to just before 1960. Keywords: affect, appraisal, basic emotion, emotion, history, psychological construction. “The past is never dead. It's not even past.”.

  5. Jan 13, 2016 · A Bourdieuian Approach to Understanding Emotion’, History and Theory, 51, 2 (May 2012), 193–220 CrossRef Google Scholar. 7. Joachim C. Häberlen and Russell A. Spinney, eds., Contemporary European History (Special Issue: Emotions in Protest Movements in Europe since 1917), 23, 4 (November 2014), 489–644. 8.

    • Christian Bailey
    • 2016
  6. Aug 5, 2021 · The former highlights spaces where children are socialised into particular emotion norms and the latter describes locations where people, but especially children, encounter different emotional cultures and learn to navigate between both.17 Katie Barclay has offered the concept of the ‘emotional ethic’ that helps to explain how emotional life can also be a domain of moral behaviour and ...

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  8. The word ‘emotion’ has a relatively recent history: originating as a translation of the French émotion, it only became a psychological concept and category of feeling in the 19th century. In earlier periods, philosophers, physicians, moralists and theologians commonly categorised feelings as ‘passions’ and ‘affections’.