Feeling It


Book Description

Feeling It brings together twelve chapters from researchers in Chicanx studies, education, feminist studies, linguistics, and translation studies to offer a cohesive yet broad-ranging exploration of the issue of affect in the language and learning experiences of Latinx youth. Drawing on data from an innovative social justice-oriented university-community partnership based in young people’s social agency and their linguistic and cultural expertise, the contributors are unified by their focus on a single year in the history of this partnership; their analytic focus on race, language, and affect in educational contexts; and their shared commitment to ethnography, discourse analysis, and qualitative methods, informed by participatory and social justice paradigms for research with youth of color. Designed specifically for use in courses, with theoretical framing by the co-editors and ethnographic contributions from leading and emergent scholars, this book is an important and timely resource on affect, race, and social justice in the United States. Thanks to its interdisciplinary grounding, Feeling It will be of interest to future teachers and to researchers and students in applied linguistics, education, and Latinx studies, as well as related fields such as anthropology, communication, social psychology, and sociology.




Feeling it


Book Description

You Feel Me?: Language and Youth Affective Agency in a Racializing World / Mary Bucholtz, Dolores Inés Casillas, and Jin Sook Lee -- Teaching, Learning, and the Affective Challenges of Social Justice. "Just" Emotions: The Politics of Racialized and Gendered Affect in a Graduate Sociolinguistic Justice Classroom / Rachel Rys -- Joint Creation: The Art of Accompaniment in the Language Beliefs of Transformative Teachers / Elizabeth Mainz -- Sounding White and Boring: Race, Identity, and Youth Freedom in an After-School Program / Anna Bax and Juan Sebastian Ferrada -- Ideologies of Race and Language in the Lives of Youth. "There's No Such Thing as Bad Language, but": Colorblindness and Teachers' Ideologies of Linguistic Appropriateness / Jessica Love-Nichols -- "I Feel Like Really Racist for Laughing": White Laughter and White Public Space in a Multiracial Classroom / Meghan Corella -- "You Don't Look Like You Speak English": Raciolinguistic Profiling and Latinx Youth Agency / Adanari Zarate -- The Complexities in Seguir Avanzando: Incongruences between the Linguistic Ideologies of Students and Their Familias / Zuleyma Nayeli Carruba-Rogel -- Youth as Affective Agents. Keeping Grandpa's Stories and Grandma's Recipes Alive: Exploring Family Language Policy in an Academic Preparation Program / Tijana Hirsch -- "Without Me, That Wouldn't Be Possible": Affect in Latinx Youth Discussions of Language Brokering / Audrey Lopez -- "To Find the Right Words": Bilingual Students' Reflections on Translation and Translatability / Katie Lateef-Jan -- Co-Constructing Academic Concepts in Hybrid Learning Spaces: Latinx Students' Navigation of "Communities of Practice" / María José Aragón -- After Affects / Mary Bucholtz, Dolores Inés Casillas, and Jin Sook Lee




I'm Feeling Macaroni and Cheese


Book Description

Youngsters can learn how to express themselves with this bright and cheery storybook from Crayola that connects their emotions to different Crayola colors. Full color.




Do It with Feeling


Book Description

There are many books out there that examine how to lose weight, how to make more money, or how to improve your relationships. In this uplifting examination of life, one answer is provided for any and all of life's problems: just relax, and allow the perfect solution to come forward. Insight is given as to how to feel better in your day-to-day experience, as well as explaining why it is never necessary to feel any type of negative emotion, be it anger, sadness, guilt, or fear. Do It With Feeling offers guidance in enabling you to create the life that you want, by changing the way that you think and feel. It will not only help you to achieve your goals more quickly, but more importantly, it will assist you in being happier along the way.




Do You Feel it Too?


Book Description

Do You Feel It Too? explores a new sense of self that is becoming manifest in experimental fiction written by a generation of authors who can be considered the 'heirs' of the postmodern tradition. It offers a precise, in-depth analysis of a new, post-postmodern direction in fiction writing, and highlights which aspects are most acute in the post-postmodern novel. Most notable is the emphatic expression of feelings and sentiments and a drive toward inter-subjective connection and communication. The self that is presented in these post-postmodern works of fiction can best be characterized asrelational. To analyze this new sense of self, a new interpretational method is introduced that offers a sophisticated approach to fictional selves combining the insights of post-classical narratology and what is called 'narrative psychology'.Close analyses of three contemporary experimental texts – Infinite Jest (1996) by David Foster Wallace,A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (2000) by Dave Eggers, and House of Leaves(2000) by Mark Danielewski – provide insight into the typical problems that the self experiences in postmodern cultural contexts. Three such problems or 'symptoms' are singled out and analyzed in depth: an inability to choose because of a lack of decision-making tools; a difficulty to situate or appropriate feelings; and a structural need for a 'we' (a desire for connectivity and sociality).The critique that can be distilled from these texts, especially on the perceivedsolipsistic quality of postmodern experience worlds, runs parallel to developments in recent critical theory. These developments, in fiction and theory both, signal, in the wake of poststructural conceptions of subjectivity, a perhaps much awaited 'turn to the human' in our culture at large today.




Sentimentalism, Ethics and the Culture of Feeling


Book Description

Sentimentalism, Ethics and the Culture of Feeling defends feeling against customary distrust or condescension by showing that the affective turn of the eighteenth-century cult of sentiment, despite its sometimes surreal manifestations, has led to a positive culture of feeling. The very reaction against sentimentalism has taught us to identity sentimentality. Fiction, moreover, remains a principal means not just of discriminating quality of feeling but of appreciating its essentially imaginative nature.




The Feeling Body


Book Description

A proposal that extends the enactive approach developed in cognitive science and philosophy of mind to issues in affective science. In The Feeling Body, Giovanna Colombetti takes ideas from the enactive approach developed over the last twenty years in cognitive science and philosophy of mind and applies them for the first time to affective science—the study of emotions, moods, and feelings. She argues that enactivism entails a view of cognition as not just embodied but also intrinsically affective, and she elaborates on the implications of this claim for the study of emotion in psychology and neuroscience. In the course of her discussion, Colombetti focuses on long-debated issues in affective science, including the notion of basic emotions, the nature of appraisal and its relationship to bodily arousal, the place of bodily feelings in emotion experience, the neurophysiological study of emotion experience, and the bodily nature of our encounters with others. Drawing on enactivist tools such as dynamical systems theory, the notion of the lived body, neurophenomenology, and phenomenological accounts of empathy, Colombetti advances a novel approach to these traditional issues that does justice to their complexity. Doing so, she also expands the enactive approach into a further domain of inquiry, one that has more generally been neglected by the embodied-embedded approach in the philosophy of cognitive science.




Feel It Real!


Book Description

Make the Law of Attraction Work for You Build your wealth Find your soul mate Create your ideal body Improve your health Achieve success The Law of Attraction has been embraced by millions as a powerful, life-changing tool. Yet while many are familiar with the theory that thinking positive will attract positive elements into your life, putting it into practice can be difficult to master. Realizing this after years of working with clients as a personal coach, Denise Coates developed fun, practical exercises for applying the Law of Attraction. Clients soon started to overcome their mental blocks and to experience the natural well-being of the Universe. These empowering, enlightening exercises -- more than fifty in all -- embrace every area of life, including wealth, health, career, body image, romantic relationships, and inner peace. Truly, profoundly uplifting and bursting with positive energy, Feel It Real! will help you to put the Law of Attraction into practice and to achieve lasting, life-changing results.




Kant's Deontological Eudaemonism


Book Description

In this book, Professor Jeanine Grenberg defends the idea that Kant's virtue theory is best understood as a system of eudaemonism, indeed, as a distinctive form of eudaemonism that makes it preferable to other forms of it: a system of what she calls Deontological Eudaemonism. In Deontological Eudaemonism, one achieves happiness both rationally conceived (as non-felt pleasure in the virtually unimpeded harmonious activity of one's will and choice) and empirically conceived (as pleasurable fulfilment of one's desires) only via authentic commitment to and fulfilment of what is demanded of all rational beings: making persons as such one's end in all things. To tell this story of Deontological Eudaemonism, Grenberg first defends the notion that Kant's deontological approach to ethics is simultaneously (and indeed, foundationally, and most basically) teleological. She then shows that the realization of an aptitude for the virtuous fulfilment of one's obligatory ends provides the solid basis for simultaneous realization of happiness, both rationally and empirically conceived. Along the way, she argues both that Kant's notion of happiness rationally conceived is essentially identical to Aristotle's conception of happiness as unimpeded activity, and that his notion of happiness empirically conceived is best realized via an unwavering commitment to the fulfilment of one's obligatory ends.




Feel the Fear... and Do It Anyway


Book Description

The classic bestseller that has inspired millions to face their fears once and for all is newly revised with an updated version. Are you afraid of making decisions . . . asking your boss for a raise . . . leaving a relationship . . . facing the future? The world is a scary place right now—day to day stress and worry is at an all-time high—but the hard truth is that fear won’t just go away on its own. The only way to get rid of fear is to approach it, and this book is your essential guide to connecting with your inner power in order to do just that. In this enduring work of self-empowerment, now updated for the post-pandemic new normal, Dr. Susan Jeffers shares dynamic techniques and profound concepts that have helped countless people grab hold of their fears and move forward with their lives. You’ll discover: · How to raise your self-esteem · How to become more assertive · How to connect to the powerhouse within · How to create more meaning in your life · How to experience more enjoyment With warmth, insight and humor, Dr. Jeffers shows you how to become powerful in the face of your fears—and enjoy the elation of living a creative, joyous, loving life. Whatever your fear, here is your chance to push through it and find true and lasting fulfillment on the other side.