| 1. | " The aim of deconstruction is to show that the very primacy
of, say, reason over emotion in Enlightenment aesthetics depends on the
existence of emotion as a defining foil to reason; this
"constructedness" makes the opposition more unstable and
subject to reversal."
| Source: | Dell'Antonio, Andrew. "Deconstructive Variations: Music and Reason in Western Society" Notes v54.n4 June 1 1998: 894-898  |
|
| 2. | "
Emotions regarding women's right to vote and hold public
office range from optimism to uneasiness - to zealous opposition."
| Source: | Ortiz, Ximena. "Rebuilding a way of life in Kuwait" Washington Times July 30 1999: 19  |
|
| 3. | " Gaines et al. continue in the vein of intimate
relationships, as they propose a revised version of Plutchik's
model of emotions that includes rejection and delight as oppositional
emotions to acceptance and disgust."
| Source: | Ifert, Danette E. "Handbook of Communication and Emotion: Research, Theory, Applications, and Contexts" Communication Quarterly 46.4 Sept. 22 1998: 486  |
|
| 4. | " In that
long-ago era when emotions were thought to originate in various organs
(particularly the heart, stomach, liver, and spleen), certain parts of
the body were said to commune with one another."
| Source: | NULAND, SHERWIN B. "Hidden Meanings" American Scholar 69.3 June 22 2000: 125  |
|
| 5. | "
The sociology of emotions (particularly Barbalet 1996; 1998) is
another new field capable of analyzing not so much the 'subjective
sentiments' but the social bases of these emotions."
| Source: | PIXLEY, J. F. "Beyond Twin Deficits: Emotions of the Future in the Organizations of Money" American Journal of Economics and Sociology 58.4 Oct. 1 1999: 1091  |
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| 6. | "
Another explanation may be that when the formateur party holds a share
of seats close to a majority, it can rely on the indiscipline of the
opposition on particular issues and obtain a legislative majority
without sacrificing portfolios."
| Source: | Cheibub, Jose Antonio,Przeworski, Adam,Saiegh, Sebastian M. "Government coalitions and legislative success under presidentialism and parliamentarism" British Journal of Political Science 34.4 Oct. 1 2004: 565-588  |
|
| 7. | "... opposition in any city where it's
proposed to terminate a JOA before its specified term," Barnett
said. "This will sting particularly in Detroit, where the JOA runs
for another 90 years."
| Source: | Davis, Joel. "S.F. papers' court case in a U.S. judge's hands" Editor & Publisher June 5 2000: 7  |
|
| 8. | "... opposition to a soap opera ("It's another episode of
Westenders", 20 September) that in the 1980s - particularly under
Michael Foot-Labour was the target for similar derision."
| Source: | . "Who are you calling dull, Mr Stothard?" New Statesman (1996) 128.4457 Oct. 4 1999: 41  |
|
| 9. | " The context of exchange may have a discernible emotional tone,
invoke particular emotion rules, and generate corrective measures when
emotions surface or are expressed (Hochschild 1979)."
| Source: | Lawler, Edward J.,Thye, Shane R. "BRINGING EMOTIONS INTO SOCIAL EXCHANGE THEORY" Annual Review of Sociology Jan. 1 1999: 217  |
|
| 10. | "... conjured up by this particular set of
proceedings. [13] In other words, it is the basic major feeling or
emotion which determines which transient emotions will also figure in
the unfolding."
| Source: | Kondos, Vivienne. "Fire, Heroes and the Cosmic: Aesthetic Resonances of Fire-walking in Northern Greece" Australian Journal of Anthropology 11.1 Apr. 1 2000: 1  |
|
| 11. | " An unfavorable
pre-start emotion pattern in the athlete was found particularly linked
to the competitive events, as six of the nine emotion scores were close
to the recalled poor performance scores."
| Source: | Robazza, Claudio,Bortoli, Laura,Nougier, Vincent. "Performance Emotions in an Elite Archer: A Case Study" Journal of Sport Behavior 23.2 June 1 2000: 144  |
|
| 12. | "
AFFECT: (noun) A feeling of emotion, particularly a strong one."
| Source: | Spencer, Constance. "Hypnotic Psychotherapy in the Identification of Core Emotional Issues" Journal of Heart Centered Therapies 3.1 Mar. 22 2000: 3  |
|
| 13. | " We know that existing
social or cultural structures predispose us to experience certain
emotions, sensations, and bodily states in particular, culturally
inscribed ways."
| Source: | Yamane, David. "Narrative and Religious Experience" Sociology of Religion 61.2 June 22 2000: 171  |
|
| 14. | " Prodger is particularly impressive in his innovative
analysis of Charles Darwin's integrative use of new photographic
technologies to render persuasive some of his more radical textual
claims about emotions in animals."
| Source: | Abir-Am, Pnina Geraldine. "Inscribing Science: Scientific Texts and the Materiality ofCommunication" Journal of Interdisciplinary History 31.1 June 22 2000: 77  |
|
| 15. | " This volume is particularly
noteworthy because the story is told in free-form poetry, linking it to
its oral roots and capturing all the drama and emotion in spare elegant
lines."
| Source: | Higgs, Jessica. "Hercules" Teacher Librarian 27.5 June 1 2000: 54  |
|
| 16. | " Mr. Barzun once noted that "Intellect
watches particularly over language because language is so far the only
device for keeping ideas clear and emotions memorable."
Accordingly, his own..."
| Source: | Kimball, Roger. "Closing time? Jacques Barzun on Western culture" New Criterion 18.10 June 1 2000: 5  |
|
| 17. | "
That alternative looks merciful during the interludes in "I
Dreamed" where emotion needs to overpower her, particularly during
two different excruciating funeral orations."
| Source: | Arnold, Gary. "`I Dreamed of Africa' induces sleep" Washington Times May 8 2000: 5  |
|
| 18. | " Yet another interpretation of
these findings may be that low-income Mexican American/Mexican immigrant
mothers may initially use strategies such as denial and venting of
emotions to reduce negative emotions associated with the stressor."
| Source: | Prelow, Hazel M.,Tein, Jenn-Yun,Roosa, Mark W.,Wood, Jennifer. "Do Coping Styles Differ Across Sociocultural Groups? The Role of Measurement Equivalence in Making This Judgment [1]" American Journal of Community Psychology 28.2 Apr. 1 2000: 225  |
|
| 19. | " Yet,
such difficulties seem particularly important for those who, like
Spurlock and Magistro, are trying to negotiate the history of emotions."
| Source: | Ryan, Patrick J. "Did Nike Say to `Just Do It" Journal of Social History 33.3 Mar. 22 2000: 747  |
|
| 20. | "... seemed to enjoy spurning the general and the universal and
sought instead what is particular and unique, longing for experiences
flooded with the genuineness of strong emotion. [12] He got high on
poetry."
| Source: | Gairdner, William. "Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Romantic Roots of Modern Democracy" Humanitas 12.1 Mar. 22 1999: 77  |
|
| 21. | " I have been arguing that Hemingway prepares us for this break
by exposing, through the figure of the Indian, the weaknesses in the
doctor's character that impel his son's
disillusionment--particularly Doctor Adams's Victorian sensibility,
cultural blindness, repression of emotion, and puritanical response to
sexuality."
| Source: | SCHEDLER, CHRISTOPHER. "THE `TRIBAL' LEGACY OF HEMINGWAY'S NICK ADAMS" Hemingway Review 19.1 Sept. 22 1999: 64  |
|
| 22. | " Confused by conflict between
intellect and emotions on opposite sides of their brain, the teen-agers
can experience greater mood swings than adults, particularly if they
were abused as children."
| Source: | Goodman, David. "Brain shifts key to teen drug use, researchers say: Puberty also linked to moodiness" Washington Times Nov. 28 1999: 2  |
|
| 23. | " Psychobabble reduces human cognition, experience and emotion to
a few bloodless abstractions: but he who would know a man (to adapt
William Blake slightly) must know him in minute particulars."
| Source: | Dalrymple, Theodore. "Psychobabble that shields the seriously selfish" New Statesman (1996) 128.4449 Aug. 16 1999: 24  |
|
| 24. | "... up. In poetry, emotions are put into the
solution of language and thereby cease to be emotions; they become
another thing, that is, representations, or art."
| Source: | KIRSCH, ADAM. "THE SOUNDS OF POETRY: A BRIEF GUIDE" American Scholar 68.2 Mar. 22 1999: 140  |
|
| 25. | "... up. In poetry, emotions are put into the
solution of language and thereby cease to be emotions; they become
another thing, that is, representations, or art."
| Source: | KIRSCH, ADAM. "HOW TO READ A POEM AND FALL IN LOVE WITH POETRY" American Scholar 68.2 Mar. 22 1999: 140  |
|