An internal critique of anthropology in recent decades has shifted the focus and scope of anthropological work on emotion. In this article, I review the changes, explore the pros and cons of leading anthropological approaches and theories, and argue that—so far as anthropology is concerned—only detailed narrative accounts can do full justice to the complexity of emotions. A narrative approach captures both the particularity and the temporal dimension of emotion with greater fidelity than semantic, synchronic, and discourse-based approaches
In this article I use Clifford Geertz’s backhanded defense of Malinowski’s seeming emotional hypocri...
A growing interest in affect holds much promise for anthropology by providing a new frame to examine...
A review of Kay Milton and Maruska Svasek (eds), Mixed Emotions: Anthropological Studies of Feeling ...
The centrality of emotion in thought and action is increasingly recognized in the human sciences, th...
Emotions have historically played a marginal role in many arenas of anthropological analysis, often ...
Fieldwork involves imagination, social encounters and a recognition of feelings, emotions, in observ...
This article pleads for a history of emotional experiences that allows for the understanding of comp...
Ethnographic research methods have gained increased popularity within the field of organisation stud...
This article is an account of different experiences, reflections and impressions that have arisen wh...
This article reflects on some epistemological and methodological tenets of cultural anthropology suc...
Although cognitive science was multidisciplinary from the start, an under-emphasis on anthropology h...
Despite the recent theoretical debate over the importance of addressing emotions in fieldwork, most...
Although cognitive science was multidisciplinary from the start, an under-emphasis on anthropology h...
Thesis (B.A.) in Anthropology--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1990.Includes bibliograph...
This thesis represents the first extended attempt by an archaeologist to construct an evolutionary t...
In this article I use Clifford Geertz’s backhanded defense of Malinowski’s seeming emotional hypocri...
A growing interest in affect holds much promise for anthropology by providing a new frame to examine...
A review of Kay Milton and Maruska Svasek (eds), Mixed Emotions: Anthropological Studies of Feeling ...
The centrality of emotion in thought and action is increasingly recognized in the human sciences, th...
Emotions have historically played a marginal role in many arenas of anthropological analysis, often ...
Fieldwork involves imagination, social encounters and a recognition of feelings, emotions, in observ...
This article pleads for a history of emotional experiences that allows for the understanding of comp...
Ethnographic research methods have gained increased popularity within the field of organisation stud...
This article is an account of different experiences, reflections and impressions that have arisen wh...
This article reflects on some epistemological and methodological tenets of cultural anthropology suc...
Although cognitive science was multidisciplinary from the start, an under-emphasis on anthropology h...
Despite the recent theoretical debate over the importance of addressing emotions in fieldwork, most...
Although cognitive science was multidisciplinary from the start, an under-emphasis on anthropology h...
Thesis (B.A.) in Anthropology--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1990.Includes bibliograph...
This thesis represents the first extended attempt by an archaeologist to construct an evolutionary t...
In this article I use Clifford Geertz’s backhanded defense of Malinowski’s seeming emotional hypocri...
A growing interest in affect holds much promise for anthropology by providing a new frame to examine...
A review of Kay Milton and Maruska Svasek (eds), Mixed Emotions: Anthropological Studies of Feeling ...