Hartley, Lucy

Physiognomy and the meaning of expression in nineteenth-century culture / Lucy Hartley - 242 pàgines : il·lustracions en blanc i negre; 23 cm - Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century. Literature and Culture ; 29 . - Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture 29 .

Inclou bibliografia, pàgines 220-239, i índex

"In Physiognomy and the Meaning of Expression in Nineteenth-Century Culture, first published in 2001, Lucy Hartley examines the emergence of physiognomy as a form of popular science. Physiognomy posited an understanding of the inner meaning of human character from observations of physical appearances, usually facial expressions. Taking the physiognomical teachings of Johann Caspar Lavater as a starting-point, Hartley considers the extent to which attempts to read the mind and judge character through expression can provide descriptions of human nature. She argues that the writings of Charles Bell, and the Pre-Raphaelites establish the significance of the physiognomical tradition for the study of expression whilst also preparing the ground for the rise of new doctrines for the expression of emotion by Alexander Bain and Herbert Spencer. She then demonstrates how the evolutionary explanation of expression proposed by Spencer and Charles Darwin is both the outcome of the physiognomical tradition and the reason for its dissolution" -- contracoberta 1. A science of mind?: theories of nature, theories of man. 2. The argument for expression: Charles Bell and the concept of design. 3. What is the character: the nature of ordinariness in the paintings of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. 4 'Beauty of character and beauty of aspect': expression, feeling, and the contemplation of emotion. 5 Universal expressions: Darwin and the naturalisation of emot.ion. 6 The promise of a new psychology?

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Fisiognomonia
Expressió facial
Emocions

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