Melancolia (2)
(...) The pleasure of melancholy does not come from excitement or intensity, but indeed rather from overall harmony we are experiencing. When feeling melancholy in the sense we have outlined, we are in control of the 'lower' emotions; we have won both overwhelming sorrow and joy. The reflection constitutive in melancholy makes it a rational, controllable emotion. We have been able to take some distance from our previous experiences; we have given them a place in our own history. The result is that we are more in harmony with our past, and we can enjoy the feeling of melancholy, rather than sink into sadness. (...)
Do ensaio Melancholy as an Aesthetic Emotion, publicado no Contemporary Aesthetics por Emily Brady e Arto Haapala
Do ensaio Melancholy as an Aesthetic Emotion, publicado no Contemporary Aesthetics por Emily Brady e Arto Haapala
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