An Emotional History of the United StatesPeter N. Stearns, Jan Lewis NYU Press, 1998 - 476 páginas Emotions lie at our very core as human beings. How we process and grapple with our emotions, how and what we emote, and how we respond to the emotions of others, constitute the essence of our social universe. In a very real sense, we exist only through the prism of our emotions. |
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Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Three Weddings and a Future | 15 |
Class Gender and the Regulation of Emotional Expression | 33 |
Narrating a Romantic | 66 |
The Gender and Racial Politics of Mourning in Antebellum | 91 |
The Emotional | 109 |
White Supremacy and the Clash | 126 |
Disaster Reporting and Emotional | 155 |
American Catholics and the Discourse of Fear | 259 |
Etiquette Books and Emotion Management in the Twentieth | 283 |
Romance and Marital | 305 |
The Problem of Modern Married Love for Middle | 319 |
The New Man and Early TwentiethCentury Emotional | 333 |
Another Self? MiddleClass American Women and Their | 357 |
Rural and Urban Womens Envy | 377 |
New Targets for American | 396 |
Dimensions | 197 |
The Vocabulary | 218 |
Sacred Quartet Music and the Emotionology | 241 |
Toward a Psychohistory of LateLife Emotionality | 417 |
Contributors | 461 |