User talk:SamanthaSj/sandbox

Can anyone see this? Marley and Ellen?

Dr. Council's feedback on Assignment 5

edit

A Few Things You Need to Fix

  1. This is on the wrong page. The instructions for Assignment 5 say it should be in the User page sandbox. This is the User talk sandbox. This should be moved to User:SamanthaSj/sandbox
  2. You need to consolidate your outlines into one.
    1. Same for the to-do list and references.
  3. When you've made these changes, please post the new outline, to-do list, and reference list in the proper sandbox.

J.R. Council (talk) 20:14, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

  • Also you need to learn proper formatting using Wikipedia code or the visual editor. The reason your work appears in grayed-out boxes is that you've got leading blank spaces in the lines. This is not acceptable for published Wiiipedia aritcles. J.R. Council (talk) 20:17, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply


Marley and Ellen- I have moved our info to my user page instead. post new changes over there. We need to learn how to get rid of those boxes in our outline as well.

SamanthaSj (talk) 17:31, 26 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

Barbara H. Rosenwein Problems and Methods in the History of Emotions Abstract What are some of the general methodological issues involved in writing a history of the emotions? Before answering this question, we need to address a major problem. If emotions are, as many scientists think, biological entities, universal within all human populations, do they—indeed can they—have much of a history at all? Once it is determined that they are less universal than claimed (without denying their somatic substratum), a host of problems and opportunities for the history of emotions emerge. In this paper, I propose that we study the emotions of the past by considering “emotional communi- ties” (briefly: social groups whose members adhere to the same valuations of emotions and their expression). I argue that we should take into considera- tion the full panoply of sources that these groups produced, and I suggest how we might most effectively interpret those sources. Finally, I consider how and why emotional change takes place, urging that the history of emo- tions be integrated into other sorts of histories—social, political, and intellectual. Ellen.Wall480 Ellen.Wall480 (talk) 18:12, 7 November 2018 (UTC)Reply