Psychological Perspective on Joy and Emotional Fulfillment

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A01=Chris Meadows
Acute Mania
affective neuroscience
Author_Chris Meadows
Category=JMQ
Delirious Mania
Discrete Emotions
Discrete Emotions Theory
Duchenne Smile
Ecstasy
Emotion
emotional phenomenology
empirical emotion research
Enjoyment Smiles
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Euphoria
evolutionary psychology emotions
Excited Joy
Expression
Genuine Enjoyment
Good Life
Happiness
High Activation Emotions
Joy Experiences
Joyous Moment
Manic Depressive Illness
Manic Euphoria
Natural Ecstasy
Pant Hoot
Peak Experiences
phenomenological analysis of joy
Phenomenology
Play Face
positive affect theory
Positive Emotion
Positive Emotion Terms
Positive Psychology
Satisfaction
Serene Joy
Sexual Strategies Theory
Stumbling on Happiness
subjective well-being studies
Term Joy
Young Man
Zygomaticus Major Muscle

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415841238
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Throughout the history of psychology, there have been full investigations of discrete emotions (particularly negative ones) and a recent wealth of books on happiness, but few exist on the emotion of joy. This book takes a unique psychological approach to understanding this powerful emotion and provides a framework within which the study of human joy and other related positive fulfillment experiences can fit in a meaningful schema.

A key feature of this book is its development of an experiential phenomenology of joy. This phenomenology is based on more than three hundred descriptions of joy experiences recounted by subjects in an empirical study executed by the author. Types of joy experiences are examined, such as excited vs. serene joy, anticipatory vs. completed joy, and affiliative vs. individuated joy. There is no comparable book or work that clarifies the relationship among major positive states with emotional components including satisfaction, happiness, and ecstasy.

Chris M. Meadows, Ph.D. taught at Vanderbilt University where his teaching and research were in the areas of emotion, personality theory, psychotherapy, and health psychology. He also served as the head of a hospital counseling center, founded a career development center, was a neuropsychologist on an inpatient unit of a major rehabilitation institute, and a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist for over 30 years.

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