Tuesday, July 30, 2013

How well do we understand literary emotions? Not very well.


“Responses to fiction, perhaps even the ones most worth having, tend to have a subtlety and focus that is not captured by standard emotion terms and that is lost in the overworked examples of pity, fear, and sadness. Though appeals to the subtlety of responses is commonplace, it is unfortunately an invitation to obscurantism. There’s no vocabulary to name responses; it’s difficult if not impossible to describe them with the limited vocabulary one does have unless one is a poet or agile critic oneself; one is forced into the position of just repeating the words that elicited the response, hoping one’s reader will respond the same way.”
            —Susan L. Feagin, Reading with Feeling: The Aesthetics of Appreciation, (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1966), 199.

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