Knowledge

Sentimentality

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323:, the analytic psychologist Carl Jung anticipates Baudrillard when he writes: "Think of the lamentable role of popular sentiment in wartime! Think of our so-called humanitarianism! The psychiatrist knows only too well how each of us becomes the helpless but not pitiable victim of his own sentiments. Sentimentality is the superstructure erected upon brutality. Unfeelingness is the counter-position and inevitably suffers from the same defects." 1756: 1750: 39: 112:
refers to techniques a writer employs to induce a tender emotional response disproportionate to the situation at hand (and thus to substitute heightened and generally uncritical feeling for normal ethical and intellectual judgments). The term may also characterize the tendency of some readers to
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drive to foster the individual's capacity to recognise virtue at a visceral level. Everywhere in the sentimental novel or the sentimental comedy, "lively and effusive emotion is celebrated as evidence of a good heart". Moral philosophers saw sentimentality as a cure for social isolation; and
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The term is also used more indiscriminately to discredit any argument as being based on a misweighting of emotion: "sentimental fallacies...that men, that we, are better—nobler—than we know ourselves to be"; "the 'sentimental fallacy' of constructing novels or plays 'out of purely emotional
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has clarified the use of the term as it applies to the genre "of the sentimental novel, stressing the way that 'different cultural assumptions arising from the oppression of women gave liberating significance to the works' piety and mythical power to the ideals of the heroines".
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Coleridge, for example, inveighed against excess in gothic writing: "We trust ... that satiety will banish what good sense should have prevented, and that ... the public will learn ... with how little expense of thought or imagination this species of composition is
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contrasts sentimentalists and romantics, with Amory Blaine telling Rosalind, "I'm not sentimental—I'm as romantic as you are. The idea, you know, is that the sentimental person thinks things will last—the romantic person has a desperate confidence that they won't."
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gave just such a quantitative definition: "a response is sentimental if it is too great for the occasion." He added, "We cannot, obviously, judge that any response is sentimental in this sense unless we take careful account of the situation." (Richards, p.
228:"Sentimentality often involves situations which evoke very intense feelings: love affairs, childbirth, death", but where the feelings are expressed with "reduced intensity and duration of emotional experience...diluted to a safe strength by 247:, "when they go on about fake sentimentality in relation to Princess Diana", also raised issues about the "powerful streak of sentimentality in the British character"—the extent to which "sentimentality was a grand old national tradition". 331:
Complications enter into the ordinary view of sentimentality, however, when changes in fashion and setting— the "climate of thought"—intrude between the work and the reader. The view that sentimentality is relative is inherent in
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LeRoy, Gaylord (1941). Hutton, Richard Holt, (1906). "The Genius of Dickens" (Brief Literary Criticisms, p 56f) as quoted in Gaylord C. LeRoy, "Richard Holt Hutton" PMLA 56.3 (September 1941:809-840) p. 831.
261:, suggesting that "in the New Sentimental Order, the affluent become consumers of the 'ever more delightful spectacle of poverty and catastrophe, and of the moving spectacle of our own attempts to alleviate it 346:(1840–41), "a scene that for many readers today might represent a defining instance of sentimentality", brought tears to the eye of many highly critical readers of the day. The reader of Dickens, 98:
originally indicated the reliance on feelings as a guide to truth, but in current usage the term commonly connotes a reliance on shallow, uncomplicated emotions at the expense of reason.
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By the close of the century, however, a reaction had occurred against what had come to be considered sentimental excess, by then seen as false and self-indulgent—especially after
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considered that "Sentimentality, the ostentatious parading of excessive and spurious emotion, is the mark of dishonesty, the inability to feel...the mask of cruelty".
382:... for the practice of attributing human emotions to the inanimate or unintelligent world"—as in "the sentimental poetic trope of the 'pathetic fallacy', beloved of 126:, Stephen Dedalus sends Buck Mulligan a telegram that reads "The sentimentalist is he who would enjoy without incurring the immense debtorship for a thing done." 491:
This was essentially the defining criterion of "sentimental" discovered in a dozen basic handbooks by Wilkie (p. 564f); Wilkie appends some textbook definitions.
336:'s "sympathetic contract", in which the reader agrees to join with the writer when approaching a poem. The example of the death of Little Nell in 306:...concerned with the relation between the rational and sentimental bases of social order raised by the market reorientation of motivation". 449: 244: 971: 1044: 201:'s 1795 division of poets into two classes, the "naive" and the "sentimental"—regarded respectively as natural and as artificial. 983: 622:
began to accrue negative connotations in the 19th century. Before that it had been an adjective denoting "feeling", as in
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device that attributes human emotions, such as grief or anger, to the forces of nature. This is also known as the
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term that has been casually applied to works of art and literature that exceed the viewer or reader's sense of
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it is possible to see the "sentimental tradition" as extending into the present-day—to see, for example, "
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are the hallmark of sentimentality, where the morality that underlies the work is both intrusive and pat.
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wrote, "is one who desires to have the luxury of an emotion without paying for it." In James Joyce's
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party". What she was observing was the way the term was becoming a European obsession—part of the
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Nevertheless, as a social force sentimentality is a hardy perennial, appearing for example as
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indeed considered that "the poets and romance writers, who best paint...domestic affections,
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Madden, William A (1973). "Victorian Sensibility and Sentiment". In Wiener, Philip P (ed.).
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The Female Complaint: The Unfinished Business of Sentimentality in American Culture
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takes up the theme through the exploration of "society's stock of shared values as
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according to which morality is somehow grounded in moral sentiments or emotions.
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Emerging Visions of the Aesthetic Process: Psychology, Semiology, and Philosophy
2267: 2200: 2019: 1700: 1586: 1234: 478: 312: 303: 265:". There is also the issue of what has been called "indecent sentimentality... 191: 2322: 2275: 1960: 1644: 1510: 1362: 1331: 1259: 1164: 442: 127: 2247: 2160: 2004: 1456: 1384: 1271: 1134: 422: 295: 266: 229: 1814: 1787: 1626: 1564: 1436: 1404: 1326: 1306: 1199: 946: 882:
The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstitution of Social Order
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as one of the great social philosophers in the sentimental tradition of
221:: "excessiveness" is the criterion; "Meretricious" and "contrived" sham 2252: 1611: 1481: 1291: 1184: 1179: 1079: 1074: 383: 350:
observed, "has the painful impression of pathos feasting upon itself."
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invest strong emotions in trite or conventional fictional situations.
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Tender emotional response disproportionate to the situation at hand
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Interactions between the emotional and executive brain systems
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In the mid-18th century, a querulous lady had complained to
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Ian Robinson, as quoted in Anderson and Mullen, p. 130-131
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pseudo-classics", so that one might say for example that "
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Jay Michael Dickson, "Defining the Sentamentalist in
153:: "What, in your opinion, is the meaning of the word 217:—the extent of permissible emotion—and standards of 190:; are, in such cases, much better instructors than 743: 741: 920:Practical Criticism: A Study of Literary Judgment 2320: 1633: 956:Wilkie, Brian (1967). "What Is Sentimentality?" 574: 572: 738: 243:". The 1990s public outpouring of grief at the 1508: 1038: 875:Poetry, Space, Landscape: Toward a New Theory 569: 1812: 1651: 1642: 1409: 913:The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English 634:Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy 2311:indicate emotion names in foreign languages 1375: 934:Documentary Expression and Thirties America 517:, Volume 44, Number 1, Fall 2006, pp. 19-37 450:The Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire 1045: 1031: 972:"Sentimentality is Poisoning Our Society" 838:Anderson, Digby, and Peter Mullen, eds., 83:Learn how and when to remove this message 925:Serafin, S. R., and A. Bendixen (1999). 889:Charles Dickens: His Tragedy and Triumph 877:. New York: Cambridge University Press. 870:. New York: Cambridge University Press. 257:attacked the sentimentality of Western 144: 2321: 981: 896:Global Politics in the Information Age 835:, by Laurence Sterne. London: Penguin. 690:Tony Blair, as quoted in Wheen, p. 207 361: 319:In a "subjective confession" of 1932, 1026: 866:Cupchik, G. C. and J. Laszlo (1992). 894:Lacey, M. J., and P. Wilkin (2005). 831:Alvarez, A. (1967). Introduction to 774:LeRoy, "Richard Holt Hutton" p. 831. 32: 1052: 941:How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World 927:Encyclopedia of American Literature 209:In modern times "sentimental" is a 13: 985:Dictionary of the History of Ideas 964: 279:sentimental novel, a faked Eden". 14: 2345: 1754: 1748: 849:. Durham: Duke University Press. 819:David Daiches, in Booth, p. 133. 37: 813: 804: 795: 786: 777: 768: 759: 750: 729: 720: 711: 702: 693: 684: 675: 666: 649: 613: 603: 598:Adam Smith: An Enlightened Life 596:Quoted in Nicholas Phillipson, 590: 581: 560: 204: 783:Serafin and Bendixen, p. 1014. 672:G. Cupchik and Laszlo, p. 120. 551: 542: 529: 520: 503: 494: 485: 472: 463: 326: 1: 845:Berlant, Lauren Gail (2008). 825: 469:Serafin and Bendixen, p. 1014 390:and their successors" in the 2263:Social emotional development 1017:In Defence of Sentimentality 110:Sentimentalism in literature 102:Sentimentalism in philosophy 28:Sentimental (disambiguation) 7: 1509: 655:Wilkie took the example of 405: 63:the claims made and adding 10: 2350: 880:Fukuyama, Francis (1999). 681:Anderson and Mullen, p. 16 25: 18: 2306: 1825: 1763: 1746: 1065: 906:Sociology as a Skin Trade 863:Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 2196:in virtual communication 943:London. p. 207-208. 918:Richards, I. A. (1930). 526:Quoted in Berlant, p. 33 457: 939:Wheen, Francis (2004). 932:Stott, William (1986). 887:Johnson, Edgar (1952). 884:. New York: Free Press. 854:The Rhetoric of Fiction 708:Lacey and Wilkin, p. 11 21:Sentimentalist Magazine 1813: 1652: 1643: 1634: 1410: 1376: 904:O'Neill, John (1972). 873:Fitter, Chris (1995). 663:, "Come Home, Father". 343:The Old Curiosity Shop 861:How Does a Poem Mean? 859:Ciardi, John (1959). 852:Booth, Wayne (1983). 833:A Sentimental Journey 661:Temperance propaganda 643:Sentimental Education 539:, Book Two, Chapter 1 537:This Side of Paradise 535:F. Scott Fitzgerald, 515:James Joyce Quarterly 436:Sentimental Education 429:Sense and Sensibility 413:Jean-Jacques Rousseau 232:and simplification". 133:This Side of Paradise 2233:Group affective tone 1015:Solomon, Robert C., 970:Dalrymple, Theodore 659:'s maudlin lyric of 378:, "a term coined by 321:Ulysses: a Monologue 145:18th-century origins 116:"A sentimentalist", 26:For other uses, see 2286:constructed emotion 1956:functional accounts 911:Ousby, Ian (1995). 765:Johnson, I, p. 309. 368:sentimental fallacy 362:Sentimental fallacy 348:Richard Holt Hutton 138:F. Scott Fitzgerald 2186:in decision-making 1427:(sense of purpose) 625:The Man of Feeling 194:" and the Stoics. 48:possibly contains 2316: 2315: 1903:Appeal to emotion 1681:Social connection 1010:The Empathy Exams 1008:Jamison, Leslie, 548:Alvarez, p. 11-12 93: 92: 85: 50:original research 2341: 2291:discrete emotion 2191:in the workplace 2087:Empathy quotient 1818: 1758: 1752: 1657: 1648: 1639: 1514: 1415: 1381: 1047: 1040: 1033: 1024: 1023: 1005: 1003: 1002: 820: 817: 811: 808: 802: 799: 793: 790: 784: 781: 775: 772: 766: 763: 757: 756:Ciardi, p. 846f. 754: 748: 747:Wilkie 1967:569. 745: 736: 733: 727: 724: 718: 715: 709: 706: 700: 697: 691: 688: 682: 679: 673: 670: 664: 653: 647: 617: 611: 607: 601: 594: 588: 587:Wheen p. 207-208 585: 579: 576: 567: 564: 558: 555: 549: 546: 540: 533: 527: 524: 518: 507: 501: 498: 492: 489: 483: 476: 470: 467: 401: 376:pathetic fallacy 308:Francis Fukuyama 264: 242: 238: 88: 81: 77: 74: 68: 65:inline citations 41: 40: 33: 2349: 2348: 2344: 2343: 2342: 2340: 2339: 2338: 2319: 2318: 2317: 2312: 2302: 2243:Jealousy in art 1986:in conversation 1908:Amygdala hijack 1821: 1759: 1753: 1744: 1733:sense of wonder 1061: 1051: 1000: 998: 996: 978:. 17 July 2010. 967: 965:Further reading 958:College English 828: 823: 818: 814: 809: 805: 800: 796: 791: 787: 782: 778: 773: 769: 764: 760: 755: 751: 746: 739: 735:Fukuyama, p. 14 734: 730: 726:O'Neill, p. 178 725: 721: 716: 712: 707: 703: 698: 694: 689: 685: 680: 676: 671: 667: 657:Henry Clay Work 654: 650: 630:Laurence Sterne 618: 614: 608: 604: 595: 591: 586: 582: 577: 570: 565: 561: 556: 552: 547: 543: 534: 530: 525: 521: 508: 504: 499: 495: 490: 486: 477: 473: 468: 464: 460: 455: 408: 399: 364: 355:feminist theory 338:Charles Dickens 329: 262: 259:humanitarianism 240: 236: 207: 161:man; we were a 147: 89: 78: 72: 69: 54: 42: 38: 31: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 2347: 2337: 2336: 2331: 2314: 2313: 2307: 2304: 2303: 2301: 2300: 2299: 2298: 2296:somatic marker 2293: 2288: 2283: 2278: 2270: 2268:Stoic passions 2265: 2260: 2255: 2250: 2245: 2240: 2235: 2230: 2225: 2224: 2223: 2218: 2216:social sharing 2213: 2208: 2206:self-conscious 2203: 2198: 2193: 2188: 2183: 2178: 2170: 2169: 2168: 2158: 2157: 2156: 2151: 2149:thought method 2146: 2141: 2136: 2131: 2126: 2121: 2116: 2114:lateralization 2111: 2106: 2101: 2096: 2091: 2090: 2089: 2084: 2074: 2073: 2072: 2062: 2057: 2052: 2047: 2042: 2037: 2032: 2027: 2022: 2017: 2009: 2008: 2007: 2002: 2001: 2000: 1990: 1989: 1988: 1978: 1973: 1968: 1963: 1958: 1953: 1948: 1943: 1941:classification 1938: 1933: 1928: 1923: 1918: 1910: 1905: 1900: 1899: 1898: 1893: 1885: 1884: 1883: 1878: 1873: 1868: 1863: 1855: 1854: 1853: 1848: 1843: 1838: 1829: 1827: 1823: 1822: 1820: 1819: 1810: 1805: 1800: 1795: 1790: 1785: 1780: 1775: 1769: 1767: 1761: 1760: 1747: 1745: 1743: 1742: 1737: 1736: 1735: 1725: 1720: 1715: 1710: 1705: 1704: 1703: 1693: 1688: 1683: 1678: 1673: 1668: 1663: 1661:Sentimentality 1658: 1649: 1640: 1631: 1630: 1629: 1619: 1614: 1609: 1604: 1599: 1594: 1589: 1584: 1583: 1582: 1577: 1572: 1567: 1557: 1552: 1551: 1550: 1540: 1535: 1530: 1525: 1520: 1515: 1506: 1501: 1500: 1499: 1497:at first sight 1494: 1484: 1479: 1474: 1469: 1464: 1459: 1454: 1449: 1444: 1439: 1434: 1429: 1421: 1416: 1407: 1402: 1397: 1392: 1387: 1382: 1373: 1368: 1367: 1366: 1354: 1349: 1344: 1339: 1334: 1329: 1324: 1319: 1314: 1309: 1304: 1299: 1294: 1289: 1284: 1279: 1274: 1269: 1268: 1267: 1257: 1252: 1247: 1242: 1237: 1235:Disappointment 1232: 1227: 1222: 1217: 1212: 1207: 1202: 1197: 1192: 1187: 1182: 1177: 1172: 1167: 1162: 1157: 1152: 1147: 1142: 1137: 1132: 1127: 1122: 1117: 1112: 1107: 1102: 1097: 1092: 1087: 1082: 1077: 1071: 1069: 1063: 1062: 1050: 1049: 1042: 1035: 1027: 1021: 1020: 1013: 1006: 994: 979: 966: 963: 962: 961: 954: 944: 937: 930: 923: 916: 909: 902: 899: 892: 885: 878: 871: 864: 857: 850: 843: 836: 827: 824: 822: 821: 812: 803: 794: 792:Ousby, p. 724. 785: 776: 767: 758: 749: 737: 728: 719: 710: 701: 692: 683: 674: 665: 648: 612: 610:manufactured." 602: 589: 580: 568: 566:Berlant, p. 34 559: 557:Alvarez, p. 12 550: 541: 528: 519: 502: 493: 484: 479:I. 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Retrieved 988:. Scribner. 984: 975: 957: 951:De Profundis 947:Wilde, Oscar 940: 933: 929:. Continuum. 926: 919: 915:. Cambridge. 912: 905: 895: 888: 881: 874: 867: 860: 853: 846: 839: 832: 815: 806: 797: 788: 779: 770: 761: 752: 731: 722: 713: 704: 695: 686: 677: 668: 651: 641: 633: 623: 619: 615: 605: 600:(2011) p. 64 597: 592: 583: 562: 553: 544: 536: 531: 522: 514: 510: 505: 496: 487: 474: 465: 448: 441: 434: 427: 423:Noble savage 396: 367: 365: 352: 341: 330: 320: 318: 311: 282:However, in 281: 276: 270: 249: 234: 230:idealisation 227: 208: 205:Modern times 196: 162: 158: 154: 148: 131: 121: 115: 100: 95: 94: 79: 70: 47: 2176:and culture 1981:recognition 1966:homeostatic 1866:forecasting 1815:Weltschmerz 1788:Misanthropy 1565:grandiosity 1447:Inspiration 1437:Infatuation 1405:Humiliation 1327:Frustration 1200:Contentment 891:. New York. 620:Sentimental 394:tradition. 380:John Ruskin 334:John Ciardi 327:Dissensions 251:Baudrillard 163:sentimental 159:sentimental 155:sentimental 118:Oscar Wilde 106:meta-ethics 2323:Categories 2253:Pathognomy 2154:well-being 2070:and gender 2065:expression 2060:exhaustion 2045:detachment 2030:competence 2011:Emotional 1993:regulation 1976:perception 1971:in animals 1921:and memory 1857:Affective 1765:Worldviews 1627:melancholy 1612:Resentment 1482:Loneliness 1457:Irritation 1442:Insecurity 1432:Indulgence 1307:Excitement 1292:Enthusiasm 1225:Depression 1185:Confidence 1180:Compassion 1155:Attraction 1080:Admiration 1075:Acceptance 1001:2009-12-02 826:References 500:Wilde 1905 384:Theocritus 372:rhetorical 292:Adam Smith 272:Fanny Hill 211:pejorative 172:Adam Smith 151:Richardson 57:improve it 2281:appraisal 2221:sociology 2172:Emotions 2144:symbiosis 2129:reasoning 2099:isolation 2040:contagion 2025:blackmail 1951:expressed 1946:evolution 1936:and sleep 1926:and music 1861:computing 1808:Reclusion 1803:Pessimism 1778:Defeatism 1708:Suffering 1654:Sehnsucht 1597:Rejection 1548:self-pity 1523:Nostalgia 1492:limerence 1462:Isolation 1400:Hostility 1357:Happiness 1337:Gratitude 1282:Emptiness 1265:vicarious 1215:Curiosity 1190:Confusion 1130:Annoyance 1110:Amusement 1100:Agitation 1095:Affection 1090:Aesthetic 1085:Adoration 949:(1905). " 840:Faking It 284:sociology 255:cynically 188:Riccoboni 184:Maurivaux 61:verifying 2334:Rhetoric 2329:Emotions 2139:security 2119:literacy 2104:lability 2094:intimacy 2035:conflict 2015:aperture 1912:Emotion 1896:negative 1891:positive 1881:spectrum 1846:measures 1798:Optimism 1793:Nihilism 1783:Fatalism 1773:Cynicism 1718:Sympathy 1713:Surprise 1555:Pleasure 1477:Kindness 1467:Jealousy 1452:Interest 1419:Hysteria 1302:Euphoria 1245:Distrust 1195:Contempt 1175:Calmness 1067:Emotions 1054:Emotions 638:Flaubert 628:(1771), 406:See also 398:patterns 392:pastoral 199:Schiller 180:Voltaire 2309:Italics 2272:Theory 2228:Feeling 2181:history 2166:bounded 2124:prosody 1931:and sex 1916:and art 1876:science 1832:Affect 1826:Related 1701:chronic 1676:Shyness 1636:Saudade 1622:Sadness 1617:Revenge 1607:Remorse 1538:Passion 1528:Outrage 1518:Neglect 1378:Hiraeth 1277:Empathy 1255:Ecstasy 1240:Disgust 1210:Cruelty 1205:Courage 1170:Boredom 1150:Arousal 1140:Anxiety 1125:Anguish 1019:(2004). 1012:(2014). 842:(1988). 646:(1869). 511:Ulysses 353:Recent 304:Goffman 300:McLuhan 288:Parsons 215:decorum 123:Ulysses 55:Please 2276:affect 2258:Pathos 2211:social 2055:eating 1728:Wonder 1696:Stress 1686:Sorrow 1602:Relief 1592:Regret 1580:vanity 1575:insult 1570:hubris 1425:Ikigai 1395:Horror 1371:Hatred 1230:Desire 1220:Defeat 1145:Apathy 992:  418:Kitsch 388:Virgil 302:, and 223:pathos 176:Racine 2201:moral 2109:labor 1961:group 1740:Worry 1723:Trust 1691:Spite 1671:Shock 1666:Shame 1560:Pride 1533:Panic 1412:Hygge 1352:Guilt 1347:Grief 1342:Greed 1312:Faith 1250:Doubt 1120:Angst 1115:Anger 1105:Agony 960:28.8 458:Notes 296:Burke 275:is a 219:taste 2020:bias 2005:work 1587:Rage 1543:Pity 1504:Lust 1487:Love 1390:Hope 1322:Flow 1317:Fear 1297:Envy 1058:list 990:ISBN 636:and 482:258) 366:The 277:very 253:has 192:Zeno 186:and 178:and 1472:Joy 1160:Awe 640:'s 632:'s 513:," 402:". 316:". 136:by 59:by 2325:: 974:. 740:^ 571:^ 386:, 340:' 298:, 294:, 1060:) 1056:( 1046:e 1039:t 1032:v 1004:. 953:" 936:. 922:. 908:. 898:. 856:. 400:' 263:' 241:' 237:" 86:) 80:( 75:) 71:( 53:. 30:. 23:.

Index

Sentimentalist Magazine
Sentimental (disambiguation)
original research
improve it
verifying
inline citations
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Sentimentalism in philosophy
meta-ethics
Sentimentalism in literature
Oscar Wilde
Ulysses
James Baldwin
This Side of Paradise
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Richardson
Enlightenment
Adam Smith
Racine
Voltaire
Maurivaux
Riccoboni
Zeno
Schiller
pejorative
decorum
taste
pathos
idealisation
death of Diana

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