ABSTRACT

Human Feelings provides a comprehensive overview of the role of emotions in human life.  Growing out of the research and writing of members of the Harvard Affect Study Group, the volume brings to bear different disciplinary outlooks and different modes of inquiry on various aspects of human affective experience.  The book opens with an section of "Theoretical Considerations" that includes an overview of affective development across the life cycle, an examination of affect and character, and an empirical analysis of gender differences in the expression of emotion.  A series of clinical reports involving patients in different age groups comprises the next section, "Affect and the Life Cycle."  Subsequent sections on "Trauma, Addiction, and Psychosomatics" and "Transformations of Affect" traverse the realms of neurobiology, addictive suffering, stress disorders, epistemology, creativity, and social organization.  A final section, "New Directions," further extends the frontiers of inquiry into nonordinary states of consciousness and the vicissitudes of well-being.

An integrative collection of multidisciplinary sweep and scholarly integrity, Human Feelings is a readable source book that brings together rigorous theoretical and developmental studies, experientially vivid self-reporting, and a wealth of illustrative clinical material.  An invaluable addition to the libraries of mental health professionals and developmental researchers, this volume will be illuminating for philosophers, social and political scientists, and lay readers as well.

part I|4 pages

Theoretical Considerations

chapter 2|19 pages

Affect and Character

chapter 3|35 pages

On Understanding Gender Differences in the Expression of Emotion

Gender Roles, Socialization, and Language

part II|3 pages

Affect and the Life Cycle

chapter 7|22 pages

Empathy, Virtuality, and the Birth of Complex Emotional States

Do We Find or Do We Create Feelings in the Other?

chapter 8|14 pages

Affect in the Elderly

Do Older People Feel Differently?

part III|3 pages

Trauma, Addiction, and Psychosomatics

chapter 10|18 pages

I Feel a Little Sad

The Application of Object Relations Theory to the Hypnotherapy of Posttraumatic Stress Disorders in Vietnam Veterans

part IV|2 pages

Transformations of Affect

chapter 13|16 pages

Duke Ellington

The Creative Process and the Ability to Experience and Tolerate Affect

chapter 15|21 pages

The Passions of Nationalism and Beyond

Identity and Power in International Relationships

part V|2 pages

New Directions

chapter 17|30 pages

The Path of Meditation

Affective Development and Psychological Well-Being