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Why Germans don't feel “anger”
-
Uwe Durst
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Chapters in this book
- I-VI I
- Introduction 1
- Testing emotional universals in Amharic 35
- Emotions and the nature of persons in Mbula 69
- Why Germans don't feel “anger” 115
- Linguistic evidence for a Lao perspective on facial expression of emotion 149
- Hati: A key word in the Malay vocabulary of emotion 167
- Talking about anger in Central Australia 197
- Meanings of Japanese sound-symbolic emotion words 217
- Concepts of anger in Chinese 255
- Human emotions viewed through the Russian language 291
- A culturally salient Polish emotion: Przykro (pron. pshickro) 337
- An inquiry into “sadness” in Chinese 359
- Subject and name index 405
- Words and phrases index 413
Chapters in this book
- I-VI I
- Introduction 1
- Testing emotional universals in Amharic 35
- Emotions and the nature of persons in Mbula 69
- Why Germans don't feel “anger” 115
- Linguistic evidence for a Lao perspective on facial expression of emotion 149
- Hati: A key word in the Malay vocabulary of emotion 167
- Talking about anger in Central Australia 197
- Meanings of Japanese sound-symbolic emotion words 217
- Concepts of anger in Chinese 255
- Human emotions viewed through the Russian language 291
- A culturally salient Polish emotion: Przykro (pron. pshickro) 337
- An inquiry into “sadness” in Chinese 359
- Subject and name index 405
- Words and phrases index 413