Emotions Make History Emotions shape individual, community and national identities. The ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (CHE) uses historical knowledge from Europe, 1100=1800, to understand the long history of emotional behaviours. Based at The University of Western Australia, with additional nodes at the Universities of Adelaide, Melbourne, Queensland and Sydney, CHE investigates how European societies thought, felt and functioned, and how these changes impact life in Australia today. More at: www.historyofemotions.org.au Emotions Make History’s tracks Umberto Grassi: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-11T07:02:05Z Rebecca McNamara: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-12T04:10:14Z Adam Hembree, 'Lexical Feeling: Language as Emotional Technology' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-12T01:23:12Z Una McIlvenna: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-09T10:55:15Z James Smith, 'Toxic Emotions: Riparian Personification and Pollution' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-10T02:35:04Z Shino Konishi, 'Emotional Exchange: Gift-Giving in Cross-Cultural Encounters' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-05T02:53:28Z
Umberto Grassi: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-11T07:02:05Z
Rebecca McNamara: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-12T04:10:14Z
Adam Hembree, 'Lexical Feeling: Language as Emotional Technology' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-12T01:23:12Z
Una McIlvenna: CHE Sydney Node Legacy Interviews by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-09T10:55:15Z
James Smith, 'Toxic Emotions: Riparian Personification and Pollution' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-10T02:35:04Z
Shino Konishi, 'Emotional Exchange: Gift-Giving in Cross-Cultural Encounters' by Emotions Make History published on 2018-07-05T02:53:28Z