Pride
Pride is the upright feeling — the chest lifting, the spine straightening, the quiet or open satisfaction in something done, made, or belonged to. It is the emotion the tradition is most divided about, named a sin in one inheritance and a dignity in another. Vela reads pride as a primary emotion that runs both ways, distinct from the defensive pride that only braces against shame, and follows the writers who have held its honest version.
Working definition · Upright satisfaction in self, lineage, or work—earned or defended.
3462 passages · 1 Vela essay · in 2 clusters
Vela’s read on this emotion
Pride is the emotion with the longest moral rap sheet, and the reading takes that history seriously without accepting its verdict. The pride the contemplative tradition warned against is real, but so is the pride a person earns by surviving, by making, by refusing to be made small — and the two are not the same feeling.
The reading splits along that seam. The memoir of escape and self-making reads pride as something reclaimed — the pride of having left, of having built a self the family or the system did not authorize. Trevor Noah's Born a Crime and the memoir of leaving hold a pride that is inseparable from dignity. The contemplative inheritance reads the other pride: Augustine of Hippo named superbia — pride — as the first and root sin, the self curving in toward itself, and the Western moral imagination has argued with that ranking ever since. The literature of identity and belonging — the pride claimed by those a culture tried to shame — reads pride as a political act, a refusal of the assigned verdict.
Pride is not the same as vanity, arrogance, or pride-as-defense. Vanity needs an audience; pride can be private. Arrogance compares and ranks; pride can simply stand. Pride-as-defense is pride mobilized to shield against shame — the upright posture held precisely because the ground feels unsafe — and the reading gives it its own page. The four are kin and the reading keeps them separate, because the difference between earned pride and defended pride is the whole moral question.
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 pride 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.
Books that illuminate pride
12: The Elements of Great Managing Author: Wagner, Rodd,Harter, James ASIN : B001KYGD42 [image "Image" file=Image00000.j
50 Principles of Composition in Photography: A Practical Guide to Seeing Photographically Through the Eyes of a Master Photographer
Bohn, Klaus · 2006
A Black Theology of Liberation
James H. Cone · 1970
Ab Urbe Condita
Livy · 1
Adam Smith A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
Advanced Techniques for Driving a Man Wild in Bed
St. Claire, Olivia
American Religious History
Patrick N. Allitt · 2001
an introduction to the study of experimental medicine (dover books on biology)
Claude Bernard · 1865
an introduction to the study of experimental medicine (dover books on biology)
Claude Bernard · 1865
Analysis and Critique: How to Engage and Write about Anything
Dorsey Armstrong · 2011
Apartamento Magazine Issue 18
2013
Bandura s Self Efficacy Theory in Action
Vela essays
Magazine pieces that take pride as a subject. Ordered by how central the emotion is to the piece.