Pride
Upright satisfaction in self, lineage, or work—earned or defended.
64 passages tagged with this primary in the Penwright corpus.
Study and magazine
Entry resolves to the emotion-tagged sequence when published (ASN-933); until then you may land on a placeholder or the main player.
No published passage–image pairings for this emotion yet. The passage list below still reflects how the corpus names this feeling in text.
Part of clusters
Pride sits inside the clusters below. Each card explains why these emotions cluster — and what specifically distinguishes Pridefrom its siblings here.
Often arrives with
Secondary emotions tagged alongside this primary in the same passages (co-occurrence in loom_passage_tags).
Articles
Vela essays that take this emotion as subject. Articles are ordered by tagging weight (the editor's read of how central this emotion is to the piece).
Research
How Vela holds this emotion as a research object — historiographic, ethnographic, and empirical. The full thread sits sibling to the desire program and the Christianity-sex-shame thread.
- Public introduction — What We Mean When We Name a Feeling. The program essay: what naming does, what disappears when a name disappears, and why the work matters for editorial honesty.
- Literature map — claims keyed to coordinates across historiography of emotion, the basic-vs-constructionist debate, cross-cultural ethnography, and the empirical psychology of named emotions.
- Bibliography — ~110 entries grouped by section, with verified DOIs and stable URLs where available.
- External research runs — index of the 36-run deep-research bring-back that underlies the map and bibliography.
- Vela research surface — index of all research threads (desire, Christianity-sex-shame, text-aesthetic, emotion, Boudoir Studios, museum diversity, artist studies).
Passages
Page 2 of 4 · 20 per page
64 tagged passages
- PAE-RC-225From Pleasure Activism (2017)
116 This essay first appeared as adrienne maree brown, “The Pleasure Dome: On Nonmnogamy and Casual Sex,” June 21, 2017, Bitch Media (blog), https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/pleasure-dome/nonmonogamy-and-casual-sex-he…
- AK-RC-295From Anna Karenina (1877)
“That’s the best way,” Stremov put in. Stremov was a man of fifty, partly gray, but still vigorous-looking, very ugly, but with a characteristic and intelligent face. Liza Merkalova was his wife’s niece, and he spent al…
- VLA-034966B6-RC-101From fundamentals of social research ch05
Selectivity is vital in summarizing data for the reader. The findings that are related to the original purpose should be stressed. Other data necessary for completeness can be reported in the appendices. The less famili…
- SHF-RC-3641From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
Nicolas found an enduring monument in the Vatican Library, which, with its later additions, is the most valuable collection in the world of rare manuscripts in Oriental, Greek, Latin and ecclesiastical literature. Among…
- BMCG-RC-475From Books That Matter: The City of God (2016)
Lecture 24 Transcript—The City of God’s Journey through History life that we have been granted in the world as we find it today. So he knew that the message he was teaching would always have to swim upstream against the…
- DB-RC-160From The Decameron (1353)
The story told by Neifile reminds me of the parlous state in which a Jew once found himself. Now that we have heard such fine things said concerning God and the truth of our religion, it will not seem inappropriate to d…
- HCC-RC-2627From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
III. Becket is more or less fully treated by Milman: Latin Christianity, bk. VIII. ch. VIII.—Dean Stanley: Historical Memorials of Canterbury, Am. ed., 1889.—Reuter: Alexander III., I. 237 sqq., 530 sqq. Dean Hook: Live…
- HCCC-RC-1953From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
xxxii., interrupted by his death), and those on the Epistles to the Galatians, Ephesians, and Titus, (written in 388), together with his critical Questions (or investigations) on Genesis. But they are not uniformly carr…
- MGA-RC-327From The Story of My Experiments with Truth (An Autobiography) (1927)
It was not quite possible to carry on the work without money. It had not been the practice hitherto to appeal to the public for money for work of this kind. Brajkishorebabu and his friends were mainly vakils who either …
- AQ22-RC-12838From Saint Thomas Aquinas Collection (22 Books) (2016)
Reply to Objection 1: As Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iii, 26): “Examples need not be wholly and at all points similar, for what is wholly similar is the same, and not an example, and especially in Divine things, for i…
- AQ22-RC-1193From Saint Thomas Aquinas Collection (22 Books) (2016)
CHRYSOSTOM. That before the taking of Jerusalem the Gospel was preached every where, hear what Paul says, Their sound is gone out into all the earth; (Rom. 10:18.) and see himself travelling from Jerusalem into Spain. A…
- HCCP-RC-4093From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
II., 1867 (465 pages), containing the Apologies, the Address to the Greeks, the Exhortation, and the Martyrium, translated by M. Dods; the Dialogue with Trypho, and On the Sole Government of God, trsl. by G. Reith; and …
- HCCP-RC-817From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
The foreign mission work has achieved three great conquests: first, the conversion of the elect remnant of the Jews, and of civilized Greeks and Romans, in the first three centuries; then the conversion of the barbarian…
- HCCP-RC-3508From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
Protestantism rejects at once the papal monarchy and the patriarchal oligarchy, and thus can justify the former as well as the latter for a certain time and a certain stage in the progress of the Christian world. § 63. …
- FDGW-RC-127From Four Days to Glory: Wrestling with the Soul of the American Heartland (2005)
After shaking hands with Moorman, Dan walks off the mat and then right back onto it, circling around the edge so he can get over to Nick’s corner in time for his 145-pound final. For the second time today, though, Dan i…
- HCC-RC-1631From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
Ordination is the solemn consecration to the special priesthood, as baptism is the introduction to the universal priesthood; and it is the medium of communicating the gifts for the ministerial office. It confers the cap…
- SPHJ-RC-245From In Search of Paul: How Jesus's Apostle Opposed Rome's Empire with God's Kingdom (2005)
I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took a loaf of bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body that is for you. Do…
- CHR4-RC-080From Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years, Part 4 (300 – 1300, Rome) (2009)
Most striking of all Constantine’s symbolic associations with the new religion was his founding of a new capital for his empire. He had no emotional investment in the city of Rome. It is likely that he had hardly if eve…
- STAC-RC-3942From Saint Thomas Aquinas Collection (22 Books) (2016)
8. Yet we think that scientific knowledge and the ability to refute objections belong to art rather than to experience, and we are of the opinion that those who are proficient in art are wiser than men of experience, im…
- HCC-RC-2637From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
He was summoned before a great council of bishops and nobles at the royal castle of Northampton in the autumn of 1164, and charged with misconduct in secular affairs while chancellor and archbishop. But his courage rose…