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Reviews"This splendid volume sets forth a comprehensive and persuasive account of anything anyone would want to know about the family of emotions including sadness, grief, melancholy, etc., and the emotional displays that may attend them, especially weeping....thoroughly researched....deeply knowledgeable....an engagingly written master class in sadness.... likely to be seen as a milestone in the study of emotion." -- Choice "David Huron presents a thorough yet approachable and captivating study of the nature of sadness from an ethological perspective....he successfully integrates hundreds of studies from diverse fields such as neurology, psychology, biology, philosophy, physiology, and anthropology....an excellent example of how to study the nature of emotions from an interdisciplinary perspective." --H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online
SynopsisAn accessible, scientific account of grief, melancholy, and nostalgia in human life and their broader lessons for understanding emotions in general. The Science of Sadness proposes an original scientific account of grief, melancholy, and nostalgia, advocating a unique ethological approach to these familiar, woeful emotions. One of the leading scholars in the psychology of music and music cognition, David Huron draws on hundreds of studies from physiology, medicine, neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, and the arts to resolve long-standing problems that have stymied modern emotion research. A careful examination of sadness-related behaviors reveals their biological and social functions, which Huron uses to formulate a new theory about how emotions in general are displayed and interpreted. We've all shed tears of joy, tears of grief, tears of pain. While different emotions often share the same weepy display, Huron identifies the single function that unites them. He suggests how weeping emerged over the course of human evolution, explores the contrasting cultural manifestations of sadness, and chronicles humanity's changing interpretations of sadness over time. Huron also explains the various ways cultures recruit and reshape involuntary emotional displays for different social purposes, and he offers a compelling narrative of what makes tragic arts so appealing. Though sadness is typically regarded as the very antithesis of happiness, The Science of Sadness draws attention to the important roles that grief, melancholy, and nostalgia play in human well-being., The Science of Sadness proposes an original scientific account of grief, melancholy, and nostalgia, advocating a unique ethological approach to these familiar, woeful emotions. One of the leading scholars in the psychology of music and music cognition, David Huron draws on hundreds of studies from physiology, medicine, neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, and the arts to resolve long standing problems that have stymied modern emotion research. A careful examination of sadness-related behaviors reveals their biological and social functions, which Huron uses to formulate a new theory about how emotions in general are displayed and interpreted.
LC Classification NumberBF575.S23H87 2024