Emotion, sense, experience
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Emotion, sense, experience
(Cambridge elements, . Elements in histories of emotions and the senses / edited by Jan Plamper)
Cambridge University Press, 2020
- : pbk
Available at 4 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [58]-69)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Emotion, Sense, Experience calls on historians of emotions and the senses to come together in serious and sustained dialogue. The Element outlines the deep if largely unacknowledged genealogy of historical writing insisting on a braided history of emotions and the senses; explains why recent historical treatments have sometimes profitably but nonetheless unhelpfully segregated the emotions from the senses; and makes a compelling case for the heuristic and interpretive dividends of bringing emotions and sensory history into conversation. Ultimately, we envisage a new way of understanding historical lived experience generally, as a mutable product of a situated world-brain-body dynamic. Such a project necessarily points us towards new interdisciplinary engagement and collaboration, especially with social neuroscience. Unpicking some commonly held assumptions about affective and sensory experience, we re-imagine the human being as both biocultural and historical, reclaiming the analysis of human experience from biology and psychology and seeking new collaborative efforts.
Table of Contents
- 1. Entanglement, divergence
- 2. Languages of feeling
- 3. Toward experience
- 4. Beings human
- 5. Dynamics.
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