ABSTRACT

Before Emotion: The Language of Feeling, 400-1800 advances current interdisciplinary research in the history of emotions through in-depth studies of the European language of emotion from late antiquity to the modern period. Focusing specifically on the premodern cognates of ‘affect’ or ‘affection’ (such as affectus, affectio, affeccioun, etc.), an international team of scholars explores the cultural and intellectual contexts in which emotion was discussed before the term ‘emotion’ itself came into widespread use. By tracing the history of key terms and concepts associated with what we identify as ‘emotions’ today, the volume offers a first-time critical foundation for understanding pre- and early modern emotions discourse, charts continuities and changes across cultures, time periods, genres, and languages, and helps contextualize modern shifts in the understanding of emotions.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

The Language of Affect from Late Antiquity to Early Modernity

chapter 1|17 pages

The Failure of affectus

Affectiones and constantiae in Augustine of Hippo

chapter 2|12 pages

Affectus in Medieval Grammar

chapter 4|10 pages

The Old English Vocabulary of Emotions

Glossing affectus

chapter 5|15 pages

Before the Affective Turn

Affectus in Heloise, Abelard, and the Woman Writer of the Epistolae duorum amantium

chapter 6|10 pages

Desire to Enjoy Something Thoroughly

The Use of the Latin affectus in Hugh of Saint Victor’s De archa Noe

chapter 8|11 pages

Affectus from Hildegard to Helfta

chapter 14|15 pages

Augustinian, Aristotelian, and Humanist Shaping of Medieval and Early Modern Emotion

Affectus, affectio, and ‘affection’ as Travelling Concepts

chapter 16|13 pages

Reconceptualizing Affect

Descartes on the Passions

chapter 18|11 pages

Unprincipled by Principle

On Hume’s Use of ‘Affection’