Citations:anemoia

English citations of anemoia

Noun: "(neologism, rare) nostalgia for a time one has never known" edit

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  • 2015 November 15, Robert Trussell, “Awash in nostalgia”, in The Kansas City Star, volume 136, number 59, Kansas City, Mo., page 12D:
    Yet, from reboots to genre revivals, nostalgia remains a powerful force in pop culture. So does an associated phenomenon, called anemoia, which is essentially nostalgia for a past you’ve never experienced. Nostalgia and anemoia have been Broadway’s bread and butter for decades.
  • 2015, "a foreign county: they do things excellently there", The Carthusian (Charterhouse School, Godalming, UK), Volume 43, Issue 1 (2015/2016), page 116:
    LP Hartley makes reference to the Golden Age (classical emblem of anemoia), but we here boldly state that this must surely be the Golden Age of junior music-making at Charterhouse.
  • 2017 November 30, Felipe De Brigard, “Nostalgia and Mental Simulation”, in Anna Gotlib, editor, The Moral Psychology of Sadness[1], Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 165:
    As we discuss, one can feel nostalgia about a happy childhood moment, a possible event involving a long-gone loved one, or even a historically impossible yet psychologically vivid anemoia of having a cup of coffee in Paris in the 1920s.
  • 2018, Trevor Harley, The Psychology of Weather[2], Routledge, →ISBN, page 102:
    A White Christmas is the perfect example of anemoia, nostalgia for a time we never knew.
  • 2018, Sara Rena Vidal, Bella and Chaim: The Story of Beauty and Life, page 5:
    This feeling is more than Anemoia– ¶ longing for a time I've never known;
  • 2018 May 17, Shane Nyman, “Local guy’s ‘Africa’ remix perfects nostalgia”, in The Post-Crescent, volume 99, number 118, Appleton, Wis., page 6A:
    Goetzman (who also records his own own[sic] original music under the alias Raspberries and Rum) brought up another idea as a possible explanation for his Toto-based virality: anemoia. That’s the concept of a person feeling nostalgic for something they never experienced. [] What I can say is this little video and its embedded nostalgia — or anemoia — seems to be bringing a little happiness to people all over the world.
  • 2018, Luke Goodling, “What The Yellow Jacket Staff Is Reading”, in The Yellow Jacket, number 4 October 2018, Waynesburg University, page D4:
    The sense of anemoia in “Dandelion Wine” is powerful and isn't lost when reading it for a second or third time.
  • 2019 July 29, Ronan, “Exploring Anemoia: Nostalgia for a Time You’ve Never Known”, in RonanTheWriter[3] (blog), archived from the original on 2020-02-23:
    There are, of course, [] other languages []. And being someone who loves language, I felt writing [] provided ample opportunity to seek out words that describe this anemoia; [].
  • 2019 July 31, J. W. Barlament, “Anemoia: Nostalgia for a Time Beyond Your Own”, in Medium[4], archived from the original on 16 May 2022:
    Nostalgia for a past not your own — anemoia — is utterly bewildering. Why, then, does it occur?
  • 2019 November 30, u/olivertreeisfuego85d, “What is one thing that gives you an intense feeling of anemoia which is the nostalgia of things that have never happened to you?”, in Reddit[5] (post), archived from the original on 2020-02-23, title:
    What is one thing that gives you an intense feeling of anemoia which is the nostalgia of things that have never happened to you?
  • 2019, Lobna Mahadi, “En Route to a New Golden Age”, in The Muslim Age, number Winter 2019, page 6:
    The Golden Age of Islam is a historical era many Muslims have grown learning about and falling in love with. While listening to stories of scientific developments, astronomical discoveries, literary and artistic revolutions and architectural creativity, feelings of pride and collective self-confidence quickly develop within us only to be confronted with a sudden sense of...sadness? regret? nostalgia? anemoia?
  • 2020, David Berry, On Nostalgia, Coach House, →ISBN, page 42:
    Certain online corners have termed this tendency 'anemoia,' although it doesn't seem to be distinct enough from what we understand nostalgia to be to catch on.
  • 2020, Ivan Phillips, Once Upon a Time Lord: The Myths and Stories of Doctor Who, Bloomsbury, →ISBN, page 42:
    This, as Booy notes, can be the nostalgia of those who remember, or misremember, the experiences of their past something ('the past was something desperately in need of recovery and it always seemed to be somehow better than the present'), but it might also be a form of anemoia, the nostalgia of those who imagine the experiences of a past that they have inherited.
  • 2020 January 3, Jáchym Ulrych, Catherine's World[6], page 59:
    The heatwaves flew over and away and so did the spiderlings trying to surf them. Anemoia of amber, the dying summer – it was all so... fading.
  • 2021 June 10, Hyun Kyung Lee, “Beyond “imagined” nostalgia: Gunsan's heritagization of Japanese colonial architecture in South Korea”, in International Journal of Asian Studies, Cambridge University Press, →DOI:
    In heritage studies, nostalgia frequently encompasses periods in the past that people have not personally experienced (anemoia).
  • 2021 June 20, “Xochi Perez”, in Film Desert Magazine, number June 2021, page 95:
    There are some shots that carry a sense of anemoia, which means nostalgia for a time you've never known.
  • 2021 June 26, Juan, “What is Anemoia? Nostalgia For A Past You Have Never Lived”, in 8-Bit Pickle[7] (blog):
    Anemoia can be expressed in multiple ways and it does not have to manifest in ways that produce completely negative feelings, far from it.
  • 2021 September 30, Thomas Michael Kersen, Where Misfits Fit: Counterculture and Influence in the Ozarks[8], University Press of Mississippi, →DOI, →ISBN, →JSTOR, →OCLC, page 43:
    Anemoia focuses on the feeling that many people have that modernity is alienating, and thus they imagine a past that never existed.
  • 2022 February, Lyra R. Saenz, Ragtime Swing, 4 Horsemen, →ISBN, page 6:
    She's only 28 for crying out loud, yet here she is nostalgic for a time period she never even lived in: anemoia, they call it. Does that make her an anemoiac? Is that even a word? Her husband always calls her an old soul.
  • 2022 June 13, Sue Nieland, Kesi Mahendran, Sarah Crafter, “I’ll never forget: Remembering of past events within the Silent Generation as a challenge to the political mobilisation of nostalgia”, in Culture & Psychology, →DOI:
    The power of anemoia is significant particularly in populist rhetoric designed to influence political decision-making.