When writing fictional characters, it’s hugely important to convey their emotions effectively so readers will be drawn in and become invested in those characters. The Emotion Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Expression was written to help writers convey the quality and depth of their characters’ feelings through their thoughts, body language, and visceral reactions. But there are also ways to amplify what a character is feeling, thereby heightening their emotional responses.
Added by: avro | Karma: 1098.18 | Other | 25 September 2014
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Why do we value music? Many people report that listening to music is one of life's most rewarding activities. In Critique of Pure Music, James O. Young seeks to explain why this is so. Formalists tell us that music is appreciated as pure, contentless form. On this view, listeners receive pleasure, or a pleasurable 'musical' emotion, when they explore the abstract patterns found in music. Music, formalists believe, does not arouse ordinary emotions such as joy, melancholy or fear, nor can it represent emotion or provide psychological insight. Young holds that formalists are wrong on all counts.
The importance of emotion in everyday interactions has become a central topic of research in a wide variety of disciplines, including linguistics, sociology, social psychology, anthropology, and communication. Emotion in Interaction offers a collection of original studies that explore emotion in naturally occurring spoken interaction. The articles examine both the verbal and non-verbal resources for expressing emotional stance (lexicon, syntax, prosody, laughter, crying, facial expression), the emotional aspects of action sequences
Added by: hmimi | Karma: 167.25 | Black Hole | 19 November 2013
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when bad things happen to other people
“Schadenfreude is a fascinating emotion, much neglected but obviously of great importance for practical ethics and moral psychology. Portmann’s book cuts across the intersection of current emotion theory, psychology, and ethics, and invites philosophical interaction with some classic literature on some of the nastier emotions. The author is obviously well read and has a rich store of literary and philosophical examples.” —Robert C. Solomon, author of The Joy of Philosophy
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The BBC New English Course includes 96 units, 24 CD-ROM and is divided into 6-LEVELS. The abundant learning materials contain glorious pictures, animated dialogues, words and sounds.
LOWER INTERMEDIATE (Disc 9-12)
Mastering basic competence in listening, speaking, reading and writing English: You’ll learn the proper words and tones used in various situations. You can sense the emotion, speed and tone of language and also tell the differences between British and American English. You can converse with English speakers from any country.