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Mixed Feelings
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‘Affective valence’ typically refers to the way an affective state feels, i.e. the quality of the (dis)pleasure we subjectively experience: fear usually feels unpleasant, while joy feels good. Yet ...
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02 June 2025

‘Affective valence’ typically refers to the way an affective state feels, i.e. the quality of the (dis)pleasure we subjectively experience: fear usually feels unpleasant, while joy feels good. Yet sometimes affective experience feels ‘bittersweet’, i.e. good and bad at the same time, as when we enjoy being scared on the roller coaster or being sad when reading a heart-rending novel. In these situations, mixed affect is experienced as a blended state in which positive and negative aspects cannot be prised apart in any meaningful way. But mixed affect can also arise from conflicting emotions (e.g when we desire something that we also wish to avoid), from ambivalence (e.g. when we are of two minds about something), and more. Taking a cross-cultural and multidisciplinary perspective, this volume aims to enrich our understanding of the phenomenology of mixed affective experiences. It explores narrative representations of mixed emotions in historical and literary works in both Western and Eastern traditions, as well as the theorization of such experiences in these traditions. It will be of interest to students and scholars of literature (especially classical Chinese, Greek, Indian, and Latin), history of emotions, and philosophy.
Price: $141.99
Pages: 218
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date:
02 June 2025
ISBN: 9783111390543
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Phenomenology, PHILOSOPHY / General
Douglas Cairns, Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland; Pia Campeggiani, Bologna University, Bologna, Italy.