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A Private History of Happiness: Ninety-Nine Moments of Joy from Around the World

Autor George Myerson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 iun 2014
*A Private History of Happiness* offers a fresh look at happiness that belonged to particular days as they were lived by real people—across many centuries and from around the world—and shows how these women and men experienced their varied moments of joy. From many written sources, notably personal diaries, letters, memoirs, and other life records, it presents a selection of ninety-nine vivid moments that really were happy. Each passage, each voice is different, and we are invited by these individuals to share what was specific to their joyful experiences—a place, a time, a relationship.
The ninety-nine moments of happiness are arranged by themes—Morning, Friendship, Garden, Family, Leisure, Nature, Food and Drink, Well-Being, Creativity, Love, and Evening—and each is followed by a brief description and commentary that encourages further reflection and exploration. The passages come from writers in North America and Europe, as well as in China and Japan, North Africa and India, and they remind us of the universal side of our being and our common capability of happiness.
Instead of advocating the latest guide or formula to achieve happiness, *A Private History of Happiness* presents a wider perspective on everyday moments of joy in different times and cultures.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781933346885
ISBN-10: 1933346884
Pagini: 238
Dimensiuni: 132 x 198 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: BLUEBRIDGE

Cuprins

Introduction
1) Morning
2) Friendship
3) Garden
4) Family
5) Leisure
6) Nature
7) Food and Drink
8) Wellbeing
9) Creativity
10) Love
11) Evening
End Notes
Index

The ninety-nine happiness moments featured in the book come from both famous and little-known individuals, and a number of them are Americans. Here is a partial list of the famous people whose happiness moments are featured:

James Audubon
Friedrich Schleiermacher
Marcus Aurelius
Robert Burns
Murusaki Shikibu
Michel de Montaigne
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Horace
Ouyang Xiu
Karl August Varnhagen von Ense
Robert Schumann
Matsuo Basho
Gilbert White
Ibn Battuta
Hermippus
Benjamin of Tudela
Walter Scott
George Eliot
Ptah Hotep
Niccolo Machiavelli
Sappho
Bhaskara
Fanny Burney
Ptolemy
Franceso Petrarca
Benjamin Franklin
Louisa May Alcott
Elizabeth Barrett
Honoré de Balzac
Leo Tolstoy
Mary Wollstonecraft
Sulpicia
Wang Wei
Washington Irving
Hans Christian Andersen
Walt Whitman
Dorothy Wordsworth

Recenzii


PRAISE FOR A PRIVATE HISTORY OF HAPPINESS:
“A remarkable compendium...What emerges is a refreshing celebration of happiness encrusted not in the bombastic language of our self-help pop psychology culture, but in the quiet humility of the real, the lived, the timeless human experience...”—BRAINPICKINGS

“Turning to the past where happiness suspended in time is found in letters and diaries, we find in Myerson’s book a charming resource...A jewel of a book, one worth keeping company within our hectic world.” —HISTORICAL NOVELS REVIEW

"...these private glimpses of delights are a heartwarming dose of perspective."--SAN FRANCISCO BOOK REVIEW

"This lovely book invites readers to contemplate their lives and begin taking pleasure in those precious little moments of simple happiness."--MONSTERS AND CRITICS

“It turns out that unpretentious, small joys have been shared by human beings across cultures and over thousands of years; in his sensitive commentaries, Myerson brings these precious past moments back to life, and into our lives.”—Harry Eyres, FINANCIAL TIMES columnist

Notă biografică

GEORGE MYERSON has written a number of books on ancient and contemporary culture, modern thought, and the philosophy of everyday life. He holds a Ph.D. in English from Cambridge University, and was for many years Lecturer and Reader in English at King’s College London.

Extras

TEXT EXCERPT "A PRIVATE HISTORY OF HAPPINESS" (9781933346885)

from the INTRODUCTION:
We can immediately tell when someone is happy. It shows in their eyes and becomes, at that instant, their presence in the world.

In the pages that follow, there are ninety-nine moments of happiness. Each was experienced by an individual at a specific time—a few minutes, an hour, one particular day—ranging from over four thousand years ago to the recent past. These were women and men, young and old, of various backgrounds. They lived (or traveled) in many parts of the world, including North America and Britain; Continental Europe and China; North Africa, India, and Japan. They were on city streets or by rural rivers, in gardens or on mountaintops, in cottages or mansions, on long journeys or short breaks when they had these varied moments of color and sensation, understanding and peace, contact and laughter.
These everyday experiences of happiness have remained vivid and recognizable across the centuries, even millennia. They come naturally into focus, making lives that might otherwise seem distant feel intuitively understandable. Many of these joyful moments belong to diaries, which in different forms have been kept by people since the dawn of writing. Others are from letters, another form of personal chronicles of passing time. A few were written as poems, usually rather private works. Even in the case of well-known individuals, these are generally words from their quieter side.
These focused glimpses of other lives and times add up to a bigger idea. They bring real human happiness before our eyes. We can see here the potential for joy hidden inside ordinary life. This is a surprising and renewing effect in our own complex and high-pressure time. For many of us in the twenty-first century, happiness has become a riddle, a goal that remains strangely nebulous. Politics and economics, education and psychology all have happiness as their promise or end. But we need to grasp the happiness that is a strand of everyday life if we are to make good on any of these promises. If we look at the statistics, we are, in industrialized societies, in general wealthier and healthier than our ancestors—but are we happier?
Like seeing colors or hearing a tune, feeling happy is different for each of us and in every experience. It is a sensation in the air, a depth to the horizon. These moments of joy from the past resonate and echo, prompting positive reflection. They invite us to think about particular people’s experiences of being happy and not merely about generalities or clichés or abstract puzzles that seem to need solving. Perhaps happiness is much of a riddle because we usually look for too big an answer. Here, however, we can see how ninety-nine individuals felt happy on their unique days. All of them are witnesses to some of the richest potential in our human lives. They do not embody the world, but they do help us to imagine humanity as a whole. Across our differences, people share a common capability of happiness, and it reminds us of the universal side of our being. Equally, these were all experiences of a particular place and time, since our being is always locally shaped and flavored. This is what made someone happy, these pages reveal, on one particular day in their life.

Like us, these men and women from the past may have been simply absorbed at the instant they felt good. But soon after, they must have recognized something special about those moments of happiness—and their written records can now pass like sunbeams or a breeze through our own everyday life.
People have, on ordinary days, been glad of life without triumphing over others or accumulating fortunes. Each of these preserved records brings this truth to the fore in a fresh way and with its own shades of meaning.
If human beings seem to become possessed by destructive urges at times, they also have an instinct for the joy of small things. In surprising times and places, the world has appeared like a precious gift.
Public history tends to turn the flow of time into a staccato rhythm of “big” dates: the coronations and resignations, coups and treaties, battles and conquests that supposedly changed the world. By contrast, private history introduces us to “little” days that were important because of what one unique person felt.
As these people from many ways of life wrote down their experiences, there was an inner core that said, “This was a moment when I was happy to be alive.” Reading their words now, even centuries later, we can feel immediately how their happiness filled passing moments, creating occasions that needed to be recorded.
Each text, each voice is different, full of a particular life with all its lights and shadows. We are invited by these ninety-nine individuals to share what was specific to their experiences—a place, a time, a relationship. Their ninety-nine moments of joy are arranged by common themes, connected to each other by the natural movement of time from morning to evening.

We gain both wisdom and pleasure from meeting these women and men. We learn naturally about happiness from their stories, which make us happy as well.
These experiences connect with our own lives. Feeling the passion of other people, their zest or deep peace, sudden pleasure or relish for life, their companionship or inwardness, we have new perspectives on the best moments in our own lives.
It is extraordinary how powerful real, remembered happiness is, how deep and true its source. Our happiest lived experiences have the power to help us face the real world with all its difficulties. They exercise a power that the advertised, virtual images and phrases of perfection do not possess. Celebrity and consumption melt away at the merest hint of trouble, but real happiness carries us onward toward the next dawn.
The aim of these pages is to show the enduring value and beauty of ordinary human happiness as we find it in passing moments.

Textul de pe ultima copertă


*A Private History of Happiness* offers a fresh look at happiness that belonged to particular days as they were lived by real people—across many centuries and from around the world—and shows how these women and men experienced their varied moments of joy. From many written sources, notably personal diaries, letters, memoirs, and other life records, it presents a selection of ninety-nine vivid moments that really were happy. Each passage, each voice is different, full of a particular life with all its lights and shadows, and we are invited by these individuals to share what was specific to their joyful experiences—a place, a time, a relationship.
The ninety-nine moments of happiness are arranged by themes—Morning, Friendship, Garden, Family, Leisure, Nature, Food and Drink, Well-Being, Creativity, Love, and Evening—and each is followed by a brief description and commentary that encourages further reflection and exploration. The passages come from writers in North America and Europe, as well as in China and Japan, North Africa and India, and they remind us of the universal side of our being and our common capability of happiness.
Instead of advocating the latest guide or formula to achieve happiness, *A Private History of Happiness* presents a wider perspective on everyday moments of joy in different times and cultures—and invites us to discover the happiness in our own lives that can be found right here and now.

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An anthology of quiet yet powerful moments of everyday bliss, drawn not from grand literary works but from private letters, journals and poems.