Search Books
Hearing Things: Voice and M… Foreign News: Exploring the…

The Secret History of Emotion: From Aristotle's Rhetoric to Modern Brain Science

Author Daniel M. Gross
Publisher University Of Chicago Press
Category Language Arts & Disciplines
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
26.93 29.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $1.50

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0226309800
ISBN-139780226309804
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,079,100
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Princess Diana’s death was a tragedy that provoked mourning across the globe; the death of a homeless person, more often than not, is met with apathy. How can we account for this uneven distribution of emotion? Can it simply be explained by the prevailing scientific understanding? Uncovering a rich tradition beginning with Aristotle, The Secret History of Emotion offers a counterpoint to the way we generally understand emotions today.
 
Through a radical rereading of Aristotle, Seneca, Thomas Hobbes, Sarah Fielding, and Judith Butler, among others, Daniel M. Gross reveals a persistent intellectual current that considers emotions as psychosocial phenomena. In Gross’s historical analysis of emotion, Aristotle and Hobbes’s rhetoric show that our passions do not stem from some inherent, universal nature of men and women, but rather are conditioned by power relations and social hierarchies. He follows up with consideration of how political passions are distributed to some people but not to others using the Roman Stoics as a guide. Hume and contemporary theorists like Judith Butler, meanwhile, explain to us how psyches are shaped by power. To supplement his argument, Gross also provides a history and critique of the dominant modern view of emotions, expressed in Darwinism and neurobiology, in which they are considered organic, personal feelings independent of social circumstances.
 
The result is a convincing work that rescues the study of the passions from science and returns it to the humanities and the art of rhetoric.

Collins I Smirt, You Stooze, They Krump: Can You Still…
View
Is There a Cow in Moscow?: More Beastly Mispronunciati…
View
Lifescripts: What to Say to Get What You Want in 101 o…
View
Cassell's Colloquial Spanish: A Handbook of Idiomatic …
View
Reading Wonders Reading/Writing Workshop Grade 6 (ELEM…
View
Reading Wonders Literature Anthology Grade 6 (ELEMENTA…
View
Writing Through Literature
View
Composition in the Classical Tradition
View
Writing Good Sentences, Revised Edition (3rd Edition)
View