Academic literature on the topic 'Histoire du ressenti - Histoire des émotions'
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Journal articles on the topic "Histoire du ressenti - Histoire des émotions"
Vincent, Alexandre. "Une histoire de silences." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 72, no. 3 (September 2017): 633–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264918000021.
Full textLombardo, Patrizia. "Tendresse et pudeur chez Stendhal." Philosophiques 35, no. 1 (June 25, 2008): 57–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/018235ar.
Full textFournier, Martine. "Histoire des émotions." Sciences Humaines N° 287, no. 12 (December 1, 2016): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/sh.287.0037.
Full textBoquet, Damien, and Piroska Nagy. "Une histoire des émotions incarnées." Médiévales 61, no. 61 (December 20, 2011): 5–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/medievales.6249.
Full textFrouard, Hélène. "Nos émotions ont une histoire." Sciences Humaines N° 299, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/sh.299.0009.
Full textSère, Bénédicte. "Histoire des émotions : l’heure des synthèses." Revue de l'histoire des religions, no. 234 (March 1, 2017): 119–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/rhr.8658.
Full textCiccione, Laure, Marie Gausseron, Vincent Léthumier, Sahra Rausch, and Emmanuelle Reimbold. "Les émotions ont-elles une histoire ?" Hypothèses 24, no. 1 (July 10, 2023): 101–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/hyp.201.0101.
Full textKonstan, David. "Y a-t-il une histoire des émotions ?" ASDIWAL. Revue genevoise d'anthropologie et d'histoire des religions 1, no. 1 (2006): 23–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/asdi.2006.854.
Full textDoucet, Sophie. "Présentation. Se pencher sur les émotions en histoire." Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française 76, no. 3-4 (2023): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1107238ar.
Full textPancer, Nira. "Histoire des émotions et bricolage méthodologique dans la littérature altimédiévale." Le Moyen Age Tome CXXVI, no. 3 (March 24, 2021): 469–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rma.263.0469.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Histoire du ressenti - Histoire des émotions"
Borgeaud, Olivier. "Être bourgeois dans le vignoble du Jura au XIXè siècle." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Lyon, 2021. https://books.openedition.org/pufc/51708.
Full textFrance was still largely a rural country in the 19th century, yet historiography seems to have favoured a thorough study of the bourgeoisie in towns while neglecting to turn its attention to the bourgeoisie in villages. Drawing on public archives, private sources and extensive correspondence, this research seeks to draw together all aspects of bourgeois family life as lived year-round in the countryside. More than a social grouping of the middle class, the rural bourgeoisie can be defined through its position at the heart of rural communities over an extended period of time, in continuity with the social order of the 18th century. “To be bourgeois” strongly implies prosperity and in most cases the ownership of land and property. The notion of work may be essential to a definition of the city bourgeois, but makes less sense in villages where the range of available professions is limited. On the other hand, correspondence reveals the active nature of life for the ladies of the rural bourgeoisie, reaching well beyond the domestic sphere. Life in the countryside engenders a type of bourgeois who is close to his land and to nature. Daily life follows the rhythm of farming, tending the vines, managing the estate, trading wine, animal husbandry and local fairs. Village bourgeois are confronted with the brutality of their rural surroundings: the body and the senses are put to the test. This study explores the history of experience of noises, smells, the cold, local travel and longer journeys, the passage of time and the handling of a pervasive environment.The family home takes on particular importance as a symbol of the village bourgeois' value and prestige. It is a stage on which the family's position and heredity are played out. The implied lifestyle within is one assisted by servants, with whom close yet distant relationships exist. In the countryside, bourgeois ladies and gentlemen differ from their urban counterparts in their uninhibited discussion of many subjects relating to hygiene, intimacy, sexuality. We will explore their use of outward appearance to project a certain image, their nuanced attitudes towards religion, their enjoyment of free time often in contrast to gender stereotypes, their mealtime rituals and their political engagements. Each phase of a rural bourgeois' life will be portrayed, from childhood to death, from education to the making of a marriage, from health to old age. We shall also investigate the bourgeois' relationship with others, in a wine-growing area where the extremely poor as well as with the landed aristocracy can be encountered. His social circle is wider than that of the urban bourgeois, because of his relative isolation in the country, and stretches far beyond the bourgeoisie to encompass his rural neighbours. This study concentrates particularly on the psychology of the bourgeois’ relationship with others. Conditioned as he is to be at ease in any social situation, he is able to operate on many different levels and create his own ecosystem.Following the collapse in land revenue and the outbreak of the phylloxera blight, by 1880 the rural bourgeoisie, more concerned with the past than the future, had all but disappeared. A new bourgeoisie came to replace them in the villages. A quite unexpected vocabulary emerges from the correspondence, revealing a particular semantic apparatus and offering detailed insights into many aspects of rural bourgeois life in the 19th century wine-growing Jura
Deren, Pascal. "Aux sources d'un marqueur neurophysiologique des émotions : l'activité électrodermale." Thesis, Lille 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011LIL10071/document.
Full textEmotion is identified by a conjugated mobilization of body and spirit. This particular matter of fact explains why anyone dedicating oneself to the study of human being pays a special attention to it. Very early, physicians notice its influence in the genesis of hysteric disorders and, more widely, of mental illnesses. They describe its effects and try to clarify its mechanisms to prevent or treat these disorders. Then, physiologists proceed to a systematic study of nervous physiology. They so bring to light the reactions of sympathic system during every kind of excitements, amongst which they identify the emotional stim1ulations. At last, psychologists in their efforts to understand human behavior, will attempt to study functions of an increasing complexity. Having discovered the laws of sensations and movements, they widen their investigations towards the superior functions, cognitive and emotional. By the end of the XIXth century, the meeting of these three areas of research let appear benefits offered by the use of physiological methods in order to identify the markers of emotional phenomena. However it is only with C.G. Jung’s first psychoanalytical researches that the most effective amongst these markers, that is to say the électrodermal reaction, will be identified and granted
Côté, Amélie. "Une histoire de résonnance : un dialogue entre texte et images." Thesis, Université Laval, 2012. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2012/29336/29336.pdf.
Full textBertau-Courbières, Clément. "Raisons des plaisirs et des joies en Grèce archaïque : pour une histoire des émotions positives et de leurs représentations." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014TOU20094.
Full textThe present research regards the history of positive emotions and their representations in archaic Greece. The history of emotions, benefiting from a new trend, which underlined the relations between emotions and cognition, is based on the hypothesis that the sense of the affective episodes depends on the historical and cultural contexts. Consequently, the aim was to unveil the positive emotions’ meaning, from Homer to Herodotus, using the available evidence. The type of analysis that was used is at the same time semantic and historical, but it rests, as well, upon anthropology and psychology. Three main fields have been looked through for this study: the Homeric epic, the archaic poetry from the time of the first poleis and the new forms of wisdom, religious or philosophical. How these positive emotions have been defined? Were their form and functions subject to change? Which role is given to them in the polis or at the banquet? Which type of discourse have they provoked, at the ethical, political or philosophical levels? Beginning with a semantic dichotomy, that seems important in the lexical field, the new representations of the positive emotions are considered in close relationship with the social, political and religious changes of the archaic period
Rivory, Laure. "Approche épistémologique et conceptuelle du rôle des émotions au sein de la rationalité." Thèse, Aix-Marseille 1, 2011. http://www.archipel.uqam.ca/4405/1/D2262.pdf.
Full textBellefeuille, Martin. "Émotion esthétique et littérature fantastique." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/66153.
Full textSubotic, Goran. "Les souvenirs de la détresse. L’écriture de l’affectivité dans quelques Mémoires français du XVIIe siècle." Thesis, Orléans, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018ORLE1157/document.
Full textOne of the most significant characteristics of the seventeenth century French Memoirs is their proximity to the historiographical practice. Rather than being accounts of the author’s inwardness, or stories about the evolution of their personality and private life, Memoirs are narratives whose main focus is witnessing historical events. These texts showcase author’s public life, career and participation in political events. However, it is not rare for these authors to personally witness bloodshed, the horrors of war, rejection, exile, injustice or grief, and remembering those experiences does not seem to leave them indifferent. Is it possible for these historical narratives to express emotional distress, pain and trauma, given that the personal discourse in Memoirs is often subjected to layers of censorship?This dissertation examines the expression of affectivity in the specific context of seventeenth-century memorial tradition in which the emotional discourse is subdued by two main types of control and regulation. On the one hand, editors profoundly modify original texts so that they seem less personal and, hence, less partial, subsequently increasing their status as credible historical sources. On the other hand, the practice of Memoir writing is taking place in a social and cultural context which is hostile to the uninhibited emotional discourse and self-expression.The expression of emotional distress is a result of a continuous dialogue between silence and the written word, between what can and cannot be expressed, between what is appropriate to say and what is appropriate to stay silent about.We studied discourses and narrative practices which allow authors to witness about their emotional distress and to express, voluntarily or involuntarily, what they feel. We insisted on the discourses which elude both social control and editorial interventions; in other words, parts of the Memoirs where affectivity is expressed despite all odds
Pierens, Matthieu. "Les sentiments négatifs à travers les siècles : l'évolution des champs sémantiques de la colère, de la peur et de la douleur en français dans la base textuelle FRANTEXT (1500-2000)." Paris 7, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA070015.
Full textThis thesis deals with the evolution of semantic fields of anger, fear and pain throughout the whole FRANTEXT textual database from the 16th to the end of the 20th century. To do so, we have conducted a diachronic study of lexemes in these fields and the three fields considered in their entirety by adopting a periodization of half a century. For each of the 39 lexemes, we have presented the evolution of its frequency, the perception of affect by language users, the nature of the experiencer, of the causes, the symptoms and the most salient metaphors, relying on the study of collocations and the most significant co-occurrences. We have shown that the range of lexemes vaiy greatly according to the era and the genre whenever it concerns emotional symptoms or metaphors / metonymies expressing intensity, appearance or control. This variability can be explained by socio-cultural changes that seem most likely to account for the ongoing reconfiguration of the system of affects. In addition, our study has also emphasized the heuristic value of semantic fields and highlighted the large variability in their frequency and their mutual relations. Finally, regarding meaning change, we have proposed a descriptive model reflecting the changes in the combinatorial of the word (prototypical vs. Peripherical uses) depending on whether its overall frequency in the corpus increases or decreases in the context of ma:or historical 'aces characterizing the evolution of the field in question
Le, Floc'h Justine. "Ardeur et vengeance : anthropologie de la colère au XVIIe siècle." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUL118.
Full textThis study aims to determine how the representations of anger were built in France in the 17th century from a broad collection of moral literature, including treatises on medicine, theology, philosophy, morals and civility. Anger was counted among the passions and defined, according to the Aristotelian proposal, as a desire for revenge caused by a perception of contempt, which manifests itself in the body with blood boiling around the heart. Anger (colère) was then correlated with choler, which is one of the four humors of the Hippocratic and galenic medicine (cholè): yellow bile causes fever and other kinds of inflammation. Considered as a form of madness and a vice by Seneca, the Ire finally appeared in the septenary scheme of the deadly sins, alongside Pride and Envy. But Christian anthropology also acknowledged its good uses, and the whole effort of the moralists, doctors and theologians of the early modern period was to determine how to reconcile the natural and physiological dimension of passion with the aspiration to virtue for the use of world. These authors encouraged the government of passions, both in a charitable perspective, and to promote their rhetorical use for self-staging in society.Our study contributes to the history of emotions in early modern France by analyzing the discourses that built the representations and the imagination of anger. By deploying the topical model of anger from a collection of moral literature considered as a discursive formation composed of different fields of knowledge, it participates in developing the historical anthropology of affectivity
Boissard, Elodie. "Concevoir l'humeur dépressive pour comprendre la dépression : psychiatrie et philosophie des états affectifs." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 1, 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023PA01H207.
Full textIn this thesis I investigate the notion of « depressed mood » which historically the central and distinctive symptom of depression. Depression was originally seen as an affective disorder but it is now explained by behavioral and cognitive models as well. Moreover, as welack a general definition of a psychiatric disorder, we also lack a conception of what makes adepressive episode “pathological”, beyond its clinical criteria. Is depression an affective disorder, a mood disorder ? If yes, then what makes the difference between depression and a non-problematic depressed mood? The aim is to improve our understanding of this psychiatric disorder thanks to philosophy. My approach combines conceptual history and conceptual analysis in philosophy of affective states and philosophy of psychiatry on the notion of“depressed mood”, in order to characterize the affective component of a depressed state, toarticulate it with the other components of such a state, and to determine in what sense such astate can be pathological. I make a conceptual history of the clinical characterization of theaffective component of a depressed state in French psychiatric, from the “alienists” to contemporary psychiatry: it shows that this affective component cannot be reduced to sadness.I formulate a functionalist theory of depressed mood in philosophy of affective states, in termsof “active depressive beliefs”: this theory defines this mood as an affective state whosedistinct effect on mental states is to recruit and bring depressive beliefs to manifest themselves. These beliefs are pessimistic, defeatist and self-deprecating beliefs about thepossibility to reach a future situation where one’s aspirations would be satisfied. To finish, Idefend a cognitivist theory of depression in terms of “self-fulfilling depressive beliefs”. These beliefs are made especially harmful by the depressed mood that modulates their functional role when it persists. The harm consists in that the depressed state jointly induced by this mood and these beliefs leads to incapacity to mobilize psychological capacities that are necessary to seek to satisfy one’s aspirations: I formulate this harm in terms of second-orderincapacity to reach a minimal well-being, so that I adapt to depression the conception of “pathological” elaborated by Nordenfelt (2000) in philosophy of psychiatry. This incapacity corresponds to a self-fulfillment of depressive beliefs under the constraint of the depressedmood
Books on the topic "Histoire du ressenti - Histoire des émotions"
teacher), Nagy Piroska (College, ed. Sensible Moyen Âge: Une histoire des émotions dans l'Occident médiéval. Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2015.
Find full textStefanik, Richard Michaels. Les clés des plus grands succès cinématographiques: Les structues, les histoires, les intrigues, les scènes, les émotions, les objectifs, les conflits, les personnages... des 20 champions du box-office américain. Paris: DIXIT, 2003.
Find full textSontag, Frederick. Emotion: Its role in understanding and decision. New York: P. Lang, 1989.
Find full textStephen, Gaukroger, ed. The soft underbelly of reason: The passions in the seventeenth century. London: Routledge, 1998.
Find full textSorabji, Richard. Emotion and peace of mind: From Stoic agitation to Christian temptation. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
Find full textEmotion and peace of mind: From Stoic agitation to Christian temptation. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Find full textMcKenzie, Alan T. Certain lively episodes: The articulation of passion in eighteenth-century prose. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1990.
Find full textFoundation, Chipstone, ed. American fancy: Exuberance in the arts, 1790-1840. Milwaukee: Chipstone Foundation, 2004.
Find full textSant, Ann Jessie Van. Eighteenth-century sensibility and the novel: The senses in social context. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
Find full textBeyond understanding: Appeals to the imagination, passions, and will in mid-nineteenth-century American women's fiction. New York: Peter Lang, 1996.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Histoire du ressenti - Histoire des émotions"
Gabriel, Frédéric. "Introduction. Les émotions de Dieu : situation et histoire du problème." In Bibliothèque de l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Sciences Religieuses, 9–66. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.behe-eb.5.117297.
Full textLabbé, Thomas. "Émotions et raison face à l’événement calamiteux au xive siècle : le De remediis utriusque fortunae de Pétrarque." In Une histoire du sensible : la perception des victimes de catastrophe du xiie au xviiie siècle, 49–67. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols Publishers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.csm-eb.5.115514.
Full textMartin, Jean-Clément. "Postface. Émotions, discours et histoire." In Les discours de la haine, 343–47. Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.septentrion.40311.
Full textChallet, Vincent. "Mueyron, mueyron los traidors : histoire d’un cri judiciaire." In Clameur publique et émotions judiciaires, 221–34. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.49070.
Full textLefoll, Fabienne. "Petite histoire de la haine ordinaire." In Professionnels de la petite enfance : au risque des émotions, 51. ERES, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eres.nain.2009.01.0051.
Full textPrétou, Pierre. "Introduction. Éléments pour une histoire de la clameur publique." In Clameur publique et émotions judiciaires, 9–26. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.49040.
Full textJoly, Maud. "Guerre civile, violences et mémoires : retour des victimes et des émotions collectives dans la société espagnole contemporaine." In Entre mémoire collective et histoire officielle, 113–25. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.100982.
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