scholarly journals About Closeness and Malicious Intent: Role of Loneliness with Emotional intimacy to Malicious envy/ Tentang Kedekatan dan Niat Jahat: Peran Kesepian dengan Kelekatan Emosional Terhadap Iri Hati

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-173
Author(s):  
Muhammad Khatami ◽  
Naurah Nadzifah ◽  
Devie Yundianto
2015 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Baumel ◽  
Ety Berant

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-188
Author(s):  
Muhammad Haris Khan ◽  
Ayesha Noor

The purpose of this research was to investigate the outcomes of envy in the workplace and the moderating role of perceived organizational support. Data was collected from 270 employees of the telecom industry. The cross-sectional research was conducted, and the data was collected through survey questionnaires from employees hailing from private Telecom companies in Pakistan. Results showed that upward social comparison initiates benign and malicious envy which, in turn, affects employee performance. Benign envy results in enhancing the employee performance whereas malicious envy shows no relationship with employee performance. By paying attention to supporting the employees, malicious envy can enhance employee performance.


Author(s):  
Sally Holloway

This chapter considers how letters worked to move a relationship forward and facilitate greater emotional intimacy between writers. The chapter evaluates the role of the love letter on the path to matrimony using the correspondences of eight couples of varied social rank. Letter-writing is presented as a distinct stage of courtship, during which couples negotiated, tested, and cemented a marital bond. Men and women adopted particular gendered strategies, with women demonstrating their virtue, modesty, and self-doubt to suitors, who in return emphasized their sincerity, and—with increasing frequency over the century—rhapsodized about their depth of feeling. Engagement to marry was not a single moment but a lengthy process, becoming more assured as greater numbers of letters were exchanged. The chapter demonstrates the emotional value of missives as ‘thoughts’ or ‘favours’ sent by loved ones, which were treated as treasured possessions and praised as sources of pleasure that could even transcend death itself.


2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 648-661
Author(s):  
Xi Kang ◽  
Baoshan Zhang ◽  
Yanling Bi ◽  
Xiaoxiao Huang

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Gaviria ◽  
Laura Quintanilla ◽  
María José Navas

Envy is the result of a social comparison that shows us a negative image of ourselves. The present study addresses the effect of the context of group comparison and group identification on children's expression of this emotion. Through different stories, participants aged between 6 and 11 years were exposed to four contexts of upward social comparison in which they had to adopt the role of the disadvantaged character. From their emotional responses and their decisions in a resource allocation task, three response profiles were created: malicious envy, benign envy, and non-envy. Although we found important differences between verbal and behavioral responses, the results showed greater envy, both malicious and benign, when the envied was an out-group. On the other hand, when the envied belonged to the in-group and competed with a member of the out-group, malicious but not benign envy practically disappeared. With age, envious responses decreased, and non-envious responses increased. The role of social identity in the promotion and inhibition of envy is discussed, as well as the acquisition of emotional display rules in the benign envy and non-envy profiles.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 454-483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Fareen Parvez

Literature on emotions and the ethnographic method has focused more on ethnographers’ emotions than the importance of informants’ emotions. This essay aims to analytically clarify the undertheorized role of informants’ emotions in fieldwork and to reflect on the consequences of the ethnographer’s need to invite and elicit their informants’ emotional vulnerabilities. Drawing on the anthropology of/from the body, it argues that in “revelatory moments,” when informants express vulnerability, ethnographers perceive the “dual nature of emotions” as particular and biographical as well as universal. Revelatory moments sharpen the analysis of the field and produce emotional intimacy. They can be crucial to achieving ethnographic depth, or thick description, which remains the gold standard of the method. Yet revelatory moments also have unintended consequences such as romanticizing informants and presenting ethical dilemmas. Three examples of emotional intimacy from fieldwork conducted in France and India illustrate the argument.


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