From hate mail to suicide notes to begging letters, this book explores the relationship between letter writing and emotion through case studies from antiquity to the 21st century. It shows how the epistolary form has offered a wide range of ways to communicate private feelings, make public statements and offers a rich historical source to explore how people have performed emotions for a range of audiences. Emotions and the Letter shows how this long-standing historical source can provide insights into a diversity of emotion traditions in different periods. Uses of the letter in different…mehr
From hate mail to suicide notes to begging letters, this book explores the relationship between letter writing and emotion through case studies from antiquity to the 21st century. It shows how the epistolary form has offered a wide range of ways to communicate private feelings, make public statements and offers a rich historical source to explore how people have performed emotions for a range of audiences. Emotions and the Letter shows how this long-standing historical source can provide insights into a diversity of emotion traditions in different periods. Uses of the letter in different periods and its emotional potential reflect important interactions between individuals and society, private and public, aesthetics and authenticity. Applying approaches and methods from the history of emotions, literary studies and affect studies this collection significantly advances our understanding of why letters remain such a critical mode of communication and shows how to analyse letters for historical emotions research.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Katie Barclay is Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of the History of Emotions, and Associate Professor of History at University of Adelaide, Australia. Diana G. Barnes is Senior Lecturer in Literary Studies, University of New England, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
Emotion and the Letter: an Introduction, Katie Barclay and Diana G. Barnes, (University of Adelaide and University of New England, Australia) 1. Rumination, Resentment and Repetition: Latin Epistolarity and the Performance of Difficult Emotion, Ruth Morello (University of Manchester, UK) 2. Gender and the Familial Letter in Joseon Korea, Susan Broomhall (Australian Catholic University, Australia) 3. Letters as Emotional Evidence in Early Modern England: Francis Bacon's printed Apologie and his manuscript letterbook, Alan Stewart (Columbia University, USA) 4. Epistolary Technologies of Separation and Archives of Emotion, James Daybell (Plymouth University, UK) 5. This is Not a Letter: A Sympathetic Story of Epistolary Fiction, 1520-1992, Diana G. Barnes (University of New England, Australia) 6. Suicide Notes in Eighteenth-Century Britain: Towards a Conflicted Genre, Eric Parisot (Flinders University, Australia) 7. Petitions and Requests: the Art of Persuading the Powerful in Eighteenth-Century United Kingdom, Katie Barclay (University of Adelaide, Australia) 8. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Animal Epistolarities: or, the Expression of Emotion in Women and Animals, Jennifer Ann McDonell (University of New England, Australia) 9. Letters to Heaven: Writing Religious Emotions in Twentieth-Century Europe, Vesna Drapac (University of Adelaide, Australia) 10. Readers' Letters to Irish and British Magazines 1958-69: a Comparative Study, Catriona Clear (National University of Ireland, Galway) 11. Hate Mail in Late Twentieth-Century USA, Prudence Flowers (Flinders University, Australia) 12. Cinematic Letters: Letter Writing in the Films of Pedro Costa, Thomas Moran (Monash University, Australia) Bibliography Notes
Emotion and the Letter: an Introduction, Katie Barclay and Diana G. Barnes, (University of Adelaide and University of New England, Australia) 1. Rumination, Resentment and Repetition: Latin Epistolarity and the Performance of Difficult Emotion, Ruth Morello (University of Manchester, UK) 2. Gender and the Familial Letter in Joseon Korea, Susan Broomhall (Australian Catholic University, Australia) 3. Letters as Emotional Evidence in Early Modern England: Francis Bacon's printed Apologie and his manuscript letterbook, Alan Stewart (Columbia University, USA) 4. Epistolary Technologies of Separation and Archives of Emotion, James Daybell (Plymouth University, UK) 5. This is Not a Letter: A Sympathetic Story of Epistolary Fiction, 1520-1992, Diana G. Barnes (University of New England, Australia) 6. Suicide Notes in Eighteenth-Century Britain: Towards a Conflicted Genre, Eric Parisot (Flinders University, Australia) 7. Petitions and Requests: the Art of Persuading the Powerful in Eighteenth-Century United Kingdom, Katie Barclay (University of Adelaide, Australia) 8. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Animal Epistolarities: or, the Expression of Emotion in Women and Animals, Jennifer Ann McDonell (University of New England, Australia) 9. Letters to Heaven: Writing Religious Emotions in Twentieth-Century Europe, Vesna Drapac (University of Adelaide, Australia) 10. Readers' Letters to Irish and British Magazines 1958-69: a Comparative Study, Catriona Clear (National University of Ireland, Galway) 11. Hate Mail in Late Twentieth-Century USA, Prudence Flowers (Flinders University, Australia) 12. Cinematic Letters: Letter Writing in the Films of Pedro Costa, Thomas Moran (Monash University, Australia) Bibliography Notes
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