Jealousy is investigated as a focus for the symbolic interactionist analysis of emotion. We define jealousy in terms of the features of the contexts in which it is evoked. Three related elements are essential: an attachment between two persons; valued resources that flow through and are controlled by that attachment; and intrusion on that attachment by a third person who is perceived by one partner as becoming or wanting to become the receiver or giver of those resources. This partner becomes jealous because of fear of loss of control over the resources that pass through the bond between the two attached people. Identification is seen as the principal mode of attachment threatened by the intrusion. The kinds of resources controlled through ...
Potential discrepancies between felt and communicated emotions elicited by two typical antecedents o...
Much of the psychological theory and research on romantic jealousy emphasizes the roles of threats t...
An empirically tested model of an individual’s cognitive and emotional consequences to a close relat...
Jealousy is investigated as a focus for the symbolic interactionist analysis of emotion. We define j...
The emotions of jealousy and envy are grasped in conventional psychological theory as discrete intra...
The aim of this study was to investigate the experience of romantic jealousy in a group of men who h...
In this contribution, I shall be questioning whether jealousy is as complex an emotion as some would...
The purpose of this study is to transcend the trait and affective boundaries in order to account for...
This study examines the concept "jealousy" using a combination of empirical and phenomenological app...
In this article we aim to contribute to psychosocial debates around selfhood by focusing empirically...
The research objective was to study the emotion of relationship jealousy in context of emotional att...
This study confirmed a hypothesis from the Emotion-in-Relationships conceptual model, wh...
A consensus is emerging that romantic jealousy is best defined in terms of a situation and is not it...
The study of jealousy is typically restricted to the examination of a third-party threat to one\u27s...
Jealousy is defined by Pines (1998) as "a complex reaction to a perceived threat to a valued re...
Potential discrepancies between felt and communicated emotions elicited by two typical antecedents o...
Much of the psychological theory and research on romantic jealousy emphasizes the roles of threats t...
An empirically tested model of an individual’s cognitive and emotional consequences to a close relat...
Jealousy is investigated as a focus for the symbolic interactionist analysis of emotion. We define j...
The emotions of jealousy and envy are grasped in conventional psychological theory as discrete intra...
The aim of this study was to investigate the experience of romantic jealousy in a group of men who h...
In this contribution, I shall be questioning whether jealousy is as complex an emotion as some would...
The purpose of this study is to transcend the trait and affective boundaries in order to account for...
This study examines the concept "jealousy" using a combination of empirical and phenomenological app...
In this article we aim to contribute to psychosocial debates around selfhood by focusing empirically...
The research objective was to study the emotion of relationship jealousy in context of emotional att...
This study confirmed a hypothesis from the Emotion-in-Relationships conceptual model, wh...
A consensus is emerging that romantic jealousy is best defined in terms of a situation and is not it...
The study of jealousy is typically restricted to the examination of a third-party threat to one\u27s...
Jealousy is defined by Pines (1998) as "a complex reaction to a perceived threat to a valued re...
Potential discrepancies between felt and communicated emotions elicited by two typical antecedents o...
Much of the psychological theory and research on romantic jealousy emphasizes the roles of threats t...
An empirically tested model of an individual’s cognitive and emotional consequences to a close relat...