Admiration
Admiration is not approval and it is not flattery. It is the body's recognition that someone else has gotten something right — the chest lifting slightly, the attention turning fully outward, the self briefly content to be the witness rather than the witnessed. Vela reads admiration as one of the social emotions that builds a life: who one admires shapes who one becomes.
Working definition · Esteem or appreciative warmth directed at another person, act, or quality.
5752 passages · 5 Vela essays · in 1 cluster
Vela’s read on this emotion
Admiration is the social emotion most likely to be confused with its weaker cousins. Approval is conditional; admiration is unconditional. Flattery is performed; admiration is involuntary. Envy is the corruption of admiration when the witness cannot bear the other's having gotten it right; admiration itself is the un-corrupted form — the witness content to have seen.
The memoir reads admiration where it is least guarded. Gloria Steinem's *My Life on the Road* tracks the women she came up admiring — Wilma Mankiller, Florynce Kennedy, the organizers whose names did not make the news — and is honest that admiration is what taught her to do the work at all. Trevor Noah's *Born a Crime* writes his mother's admiration-shape as the inheritance: a child learns what counts as a serious life by watching the adult who is leading one. Tara Westover's *Educated* preserves admiration's complications — the long work of admiring teachers and writers who taught her things her family had refused to.
The contemplative literature treats admiration as a discipline of seeing. Augustine of Hippo, writing the *Confessions* in the late fourth century, named admiration of God as the corrective for admiration of the self. Saint-Exupéry's *The Little Prince* turns admiration toward the small and the easily overlooked. The biographical tradition — Plutarch, Boswell, the modern memoir — exists in part to make admiration usable: the admired life rendered specific enough to learn from.
Admiration is not the same as approval, awe, envy, or flattery. Approval is the conditional acknowledgment that someone has met a standard; admiration is the unconditional recognition that they have exceeded one. Awe is the more disproportionate cousin — the witness flooded rather than steadied. Envy is admiration that cannot bear its own subordination. Flattery is the performance of admiration without its substance.
Study and magazine
Long-form guide in the magazine
An essay on how this word lives in language, in the tagged corpus, and in figurative art when curators pair passage with image — not a list of stages, not permission to feel.
Read the guideBooks that read admiration attentively
The books Vela returns to for this emotion. Each card opens the book’s profile in the library — where the rest of the passages and the editorial read sit together.
Gloria Steinem — My Life on the Road
Admiration as the curriculum of a life — the women she came up watching, named with their actual names, treated as the apprenticeship that taught her the work.
Trevor Noah — Born a Crime
A mother's admiration-shape as inheritance — the child learning what counts as a serious life by watching the adult who is leading one.
Tara Westover — Educated
Admiration's complications — the long work of admiring teachers and writers who taught her things her family had refused to.
Books that illuminate admiration
Ab Urbe Condita
Livy · 1
Adam Smith A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
Art and Visual Perception: A Psychology of the Creative Eye
Rudolf Arnheim · 1974
Barclay's Guide to the New Testament
William Barclay · 2008
Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women
Brittney C. Cooper · 2017
Christian Saints
Christopher Grey's Lighting Techniques for Beauty and Glamour Photography
Grey, Christopher · 2011
Designing News
Francesco Franchi · 2013
Editorial Design
Cath Caldwell and Yolanda Zappaterra · 2014
Grid Systems in Graphic Design
Josef Müller-Brockmann · 1981
Handbook of Item Response Theory, Volume Three: Applications
Wim J. van der Linden (editor) · 2018
Histories
Herodotus · 5
Vela essays
Magazine pieces that take admiration as a subject. Ordered by how central the emotion is to the piece.
Elements of Looking
Centrally about
What Rembrandt Knew About Shadow
The most influential lighting technique in art history, and why photographers are still learning from a painter who died in 1669.
Rembrandt van Rijn never photographed anyone. He died three hundred and fifty-seven years before the first camera. And yet every portrait photographer working today is, in some sense, his student.
6 min read
Essays
Centrally about
Drapery as Language
The Sitter’s Weight — Sargent, the Commission, and What Fabric Does in a Portrait
The first thing to know about John Singer Sargent, if you are coming to him from the side of the twentieth century that made image the subject, is that his sitters were not public before they were private. They were not already circulating.…
15 min read
Essays
Strongly present
Vienna, Three Ways (draft mirror)
A retrospective: Warhol, Schiele, Klimt — what the studies kept, what they refused, and what still argues with us
This is the capstone to a deliberate triptych. Andy Warhol was our study in reproduction as a kind of devotion — a face the culture already held in common, passed through the Factory until the operation on the image, not the face it showed,…
9 min read
Conversations
Strongly present
The Figure Turned Away
Degas, 1885. A photographer you don't know, 2024. The same morning. What travels across time when everything else changes.
There is a Seurat conté study from the 1880s for Les Poseuses in which a standing nude faces you on the page — frontal and direct, nowhere to hide. This is not a turned back; it is here on purpose, because the essay is about absorption, and…
7 min read
essays
Adjacent
The Absent Anchor
Why naming what the library cannot cite is still scholarship
This is the first essay in the Coverage Gap Essays series — a standing invitation to turn retrieval misses into publishable argument.
6 min read