The “History of Emotions” and the Future of Emotion Research

Emotion Review 2 (3):269-273 (2010)
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Abstract

This article focuses on the emergence of a new subfield of emotion research known as “history of emotions.” People’s emotional lives depend on the construals which they impose on events, situations, and human actions. Different cultures and different languages suggest different habitual construals, and since habitual construals change over time, as a result, habitual feelings change, too. But to study construals we need a suitable methodology. The article assumes that such a methodology is provided by the Natural Semantic Metalanguage (NSM) and it applies the NSM approach to the history of “happiness,” an emotion which is very much at the forefront of current debates across a range of disciplines. The article shows how the “history of emotions” can be combined with cultural semantics and why this combination opens new perspectives before the whole interdisciplinary field of emotion research

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Anna Wierzbicka
Australian National University

References found in this work

Semantics: primes and universals.Anna Wierzbicka - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.

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