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
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64 tagged passages
- BRB-RC-049From Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women (2017)
This chapter moves across the span of her career, mapping her development of a concept called “dignified agitation,” which she introduces in a 1913 speech. She returns to this formulation throughout her career, and I ar…
- HCCC-RC-3726From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
In the reign of Louis XI., who gloried in the title "the first Christian king," French poets celebrated his deeds. The homage of royalty took in part the place among the literary men of France that the cult of antiquity…
- HCC-RC-2001From History of the Christian Church: The Complete Set of Eight Volumes (1858)
Keltic Christianity was at first independent of Rome, and even antagonistic to it in certain subordinate rites; but after the Saxon and Norman conquests, it was brought into conformity, and since the Reformation, the Ir…
- UBH-RC-240From Under the Banner of Heaven (2003)
The excerpt from Lucy Walker’s memoirs was cited in No Man Knows My History . Twelve: Carthage My main sources were An Intimate Chronicle: The Journals of William Clayton ; No Man Knows My History ; Mormon Polygamy: A H…