A general theory of emotions and social life [
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
London,New York :
Routledge ,
c2007
|
Series: | Routledge advances in sociology ;
24 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | NetLibrary |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Introduction
- 2. From Darwin to psychoevolutionary theories of primary and secondary emotions
- 3. The four pairs of opposite primary emotions : acceptance and disgust, joy and sadness, anger and fear, anticipation and surprise
- 4. Secondary emotions : the four pairs of opposite primary dyads : love and misery, pride and embarrassment, aggressiveness and alarm, curiosity and cynicism
- 5. Secondary emotions, continued : the four pairs of half-opposite secondary dyads : dominance and submissiveness, optimism and pessimism, delight and disappointment, repugnance and contempt
- 6. Secondary emotions, continued : the eight tertiary dyads : resourcefulness and shock, morbidness and resignation, sullenness and guilt, anxiety and outrage
- 7. Secondary emotions, continued : the four antithetical, quaternary dyads : ambivalence, catharsis, frozenness, confusion
- 8. The sociorelational approach to the emotions : four elementary forms of sociality
- 9. Affect-spectrum theory : the emotions of rationality and of intimacy
- 10. Affect-spectrum theory, continued : the emotions linking informal community and formal society; a typology of four character structures
- 11. Social identity and social control : pride and embarrassment, pridefulness and shame
- 12. Socialization and the emotions : from alexithymia to symbolic elaboration and creativity
- 13. The development of tertiary emotions : jealousy, envy, ambition, confidence, and hope
- 14. Emotions, violence, and the self
- 15. A partial empirical test of affect-spectrum theory