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Zusatztext "A leading researcher on this particular subject! Crozier has written an excellent overview of the research findings on shyness! emotions and blushing . . . this is the first study of this common phenomenon. As such it is a vital resource." - Choice Informationen zum Autor W. RAY CROZIER is Professor of Psychology in the School of Social Sciences at Cardiff University, UK, and is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society. The author of Understanding Shyness: Psychological Perspectives , and joint editor (with L.E. Alden) of The Essential Handbook of Social Anxiety for Clinicians and of the International Handbook of Social Anxiety , he has published widely on shyness, blushing and social anxiety, and on the psychology of art. Klappentext The blush is a ubiquitous, but little understood, phenomenon. It involves an involuntary change in the face that can express feelings, reveal character and cause intense anxiety. Crozier provides a scholarly, yet accessible, synthesis of new research, locating blushing within the context of the 'social emotions' of embarrassment, shame and shyness. Zusammenfassung The blush is a ubiquitous! but little understood! phenomenon. It involves an involuntary change in the face that can express feelings! reveal character and cause intense anxiety. Crozier provides a scholarly! yet accessible! synthesis of new research! locating blushing within the context of the 'social emotions' of embarrassment! shame and shyness. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Tables and Figures Acknowledgements Introduction PART 1: EMOTION IN SOCIAL LIFE Emotion and its Expression Self-consciousness and Emotion PART 2: THE NATURE OF THE BLUSH What is a Blush? Reasons to Blush Occasion to Blush PART 3: THE SOCIAL EMOTIONS Embarrassment Shame Shame, Guilt and Anger Shyness PART 4: PROBLEMATIZING BLUSHING Propensity to Blush Interventions Conclusions Notes References Index...
List of contents
List of Tables and Figures Acknowledgements Introduction PART 1: EMOTION IN SOCIAL LIFE Emotion and its Expression Self-consciousness and Emotion PART 2: THE NATURE OF THE BLUSH What is a Blush? Reasons to Blush Occasion to Blush PART 3: THE SOCIAL EMOTIONS Embarrassment Shame Shame, Guilt and Anger Shyness PART 4: PROBLEMATIZING BLUSHING Propensity to Blush Interventions Conclusions Notes References Index
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"A leading researcher on this particular subject, Crozier has written an excellent overview of the research findings on shyness, emotions and blushing . . . this is the first study of this common phenomenon. As such it is a vital resource." - Choice