Affect Imagery Consciousness: Volume II: The Negative Affects

Front Cover
Springer Publishing Company, Jan 15, 1963 - Medical - 580 pages

Tomkins' magnum opus, Affect, Imagery, Consciousness, was published by Springer Publishing Company in four volumes over 30 years. When Tomkins began writing the book in the 1950's, American psychology was dominated by psychoanalytic and behaviorist theories - neither of which placed much importance on the role of basic emotions in everyday human behavior. Tomkins challenged the status quo by developing - over the span of nearly 2,000 pages -- a theory of consciousness and motivation that placed emotion at the core of the human experience. Because so few psychologists were studying emotion at that time, Tomkins drew liberally from other academic disciplines to help formulate his ideas and support his arguments: evolutionary biology, ethology, cybernetics, literature, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and neurophysiology, among others. In the process, Tomkins practically invented the field of "nonverbal behavior" through close observation of emotional expressions in people, including his own infant son. His work was a brilliantly eccentric pastiche of ideas that adhered to no strict disciplinary or ideological boundaries. In time, however, AIC came to prominence through the research of his disciples, notably Paul Ekman and Carroll Izzard, who went on to become major researchers in the psychology of emotion. Today, Tomkins's book is influential not just in psychology but in philosophy, sociology, communication studies, even in "affective computing.

Springer Publishing Company is pleased to continue to offer this magisterial work in four volumes.

 

Selected pages

Contents

14 DistressAnguish and the Crying Response
3
15 DistressAnguish Dynamics The Adult Consequences of the Socialization of Crying
47
16 ShameHumiliation versus ContemptDisgust The Nature of the Response
118
17 ShameHumiliation and the Taboo on Looking
157
18 The Sources of ShameHumiliation ContemptDisgust and SelfContemptSelfDisgust
184
19 The Impact of Humiliation General Images and Strategies
261
20 Continuities and Discontinuities in the Impact of Humiliation The Intrusion and Iceberg Models
301
21 Continuities and Discontinuities in the Impact of Humiliation The Monopolistic and Snow Ball Models
349
22 The Structure of Monopolistic Humiliation Theory Including the Paranoid Posture and Paranoid Schizophrenia
421
23 Continuities and Discontinuities in the Impact of Humiliation Some Specific Examples of the Paranoid Posture
481
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1963)

Silvan S. Tomkins, PhD, (1911-1991) was one of the most influential theorists of 20th-century psychology and is generally considered the founder of modern affective science. From 1947 until his retirement in 1975, Tomkins taught at Princeton University, The CUNY Graduate Center, and Rutgers University.

Bibliographic information