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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
By Vinciane Despret
"Broken hearts, edgy nerves, tightened throats - our emotions grab and take hold of us. But if our emotions appear obvious to us, are they necessarily real or universal? This is what researchers in physiology and psychology often assert, but they will ultimately be disappointed." "Vinciane Despret shows how some of our emotions, precisely those we thought were a natural part of our makeup, do not exist unless they have been inscribed in our subjectivity through the mediation of culture." "Our emotions, then, exist only within our relations to others. Anthropologists and ethnologists often return from distant regions and remote islands with emotions unknown to their peers at home, which can only be expressed in the tribal tongue they have learned. Following such discoveries, one should not be surprised to find that anger does not exist among the Uktus, and the Ikfalus have to teach fear to their children." "One only has to consider the emotions of other societies and traditions to recognize that they are cultural productions with wide and significant variations, like good manners. Our emotions, then, represent the way that we see the world and try to make it our own."--BOOK JACKET.
Published
June 2004
Format
Hardcover
Pages
326
Language
English
ISBN
9781590510360