Voyages of the Heart: Living an Emotionally Creative LifeFree Press, 1992 - 370 ページ For most of human history emotion has been the province of artists, shamans, and our latter-day shamans--therapists. Recently it has become the province of scientists as well. In Voyages of the Heart, James Averill and Elma Nunley draw on a decade of research on emotion and on creativity by psychologists, biologists, sociologists, and anthropologists, as well as on clinical experience, to construct a new model of emotional experience. Just as we develop our repertoires of intellectual skills through learning and maturation, the authors argue, so can we develop our repertoires of emotional skills to achieve our full human potential. Emotional creativity demands commitment to seek excellence in the affective as well as the intellectual domain. We can change and improve our emotional lives by acquiring knowledge about emotions--for example, recognizing and dispelling deeply ingrained myths about emotion, such as that we are "gripped", "seized", and "overcome" by feelings. According to the authors, we are not the victims of our emotions as these descriptions suggest. Rather, we actively construct our emotions, although on a preconscious level. We must seek then to become consciously aware of our own emotional lives. Research suggests that emotionally creative people are not only deeply involved in exploring the meaning of their own emotional experience, they also pay close attention to how their behavior affects others, while less emotionally creative people tend to focus on themselves. There is much to be gained from a better understanding of what exactly feelings are and where they come from. Our attitudes toward expression of emotion reveal high ambivalence: On the one hand, a persondevoid of emotion is seen as cold and calculating; on the other, a person who becomes too readily emotional is regarded as childish. Some people feel empty on the inside, while others feel as though they are about to explode from the force of uncontrollable feelings. Even for those who lead more satisfactory emotional lives, a deeper understanding will enable us to manage our emotions in a simultaneously creative and disciplined way. Averill and Nunley explore differences in emotional experience between men and women, as well as fascinating historical and cross-cultural variations in the rules governing the display and management of emotion. Richly illustrated with examples from everyday life, Voyages of the Heart shows us how we can become more aware of our own thoughts and feelings, manage our emotions in a creative yet disciplined way, and live to the full extent of our human potential. |
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... Particularly in a society like ours , where social relationships of many kinds are reinforced and legitimized by reference to personal feelings , any change in the meaning and structure of our emotions may have far reaching ...
... Particularly in a society like ours , where social relationships of many kinds are reinforced and legitimized by reference to personal feelings , any change in the meaning and structure of our emotions may have far reaching ...
180 ページ
... particularly in the loss of individuality . The second or neurotic mode represents a failure in going from the first ( normal ) to the third ( creative ) stage . Neurotic persons perceive external demands and social norms as compulsions ...
... particularly in the loss of individuality . The second or neurotic mode represents a failure in going from the first ( normal ) to the third ( creative ) stage . Neurotic persons perceive external demands and social norms as compulsions ...
261 ページ
... particularly poignant example is childhood abuse . In order to survive psychologically , abused children often learn to separate themselves mentally from what they are experiencing . The result is arrested emotional development ...
... particularly poignant example is childhood abuse . In order to survive psychologically , abused children often learn to separate themselves mentally from what they are experiencing . The result is arrested emotional development ...
目次
Images of Emotional Creativity 1 Emotions and Creativity | 1 |
Romantic Love | 2 |
On Being a Wild Pig and Other Such Things | 3 |
著作権 | |
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多く使われている語句
abstract expressionism achieve aesthetic value Andreas Capellanus Andrei Tarkovsky anger angry anxiety Aristotle artistic authenticity autonomy Averill beautiful become behavior biological challenge commitment concept conflict courtly love creative individuals creative persons culture death depression described desire discussed in Chapter domain effective Emotion Myth emotional creativity emotional experiences emotional responses emotionally creative Epicurus example experienced expression fear feelings Frankl Freud goals grief human Ibid illustrate Ilongot imagination important innovation intellectual intimacy kind of emotion liget live meaning myths of emotion nature near-death experiences negative freedom neurosis neurotic Nietzsche novel novelty nuclear one's Original work published paedogenesis pain passion Pelops perhaps physiological pleasure Plotinus positive freedom primary psychological psychotherapy PTSD reactions romantic love rules of emotion sense sensory sexual ship of Theseus simply social society solitude spiritual suffering syndromes things tion Trans true typically wild pig woman women York