Blog Calendar
    August     ►
SMTWTFS
     
27
28
29
30
31
Archive RSS
About This Author
Come closer.
Carrion Luggage
#1095907 added August 25, 2025 at 9:45am
Restrictions: None
Instant Kama
This Guardian article is from last year, so some cultural references have already expired.



Yeah, I thought kama muta was when you put commas everywhere, and, anywhere, you, feel, like.

What I’m feeling is kama muta – an under-recognised emotion that has been the focus of Fiske’s work for more than a decade. According to Fiske and his colleagues, kama muta evolved to bind us to others and strengthen our relationships.

I can accept that there are emotions that need to be recognized. I'm concerned about the evolutionary psychology speculation, but I'll let it slide for now.

The article links to a page giving a concise definition of kama muta: "Kama muta is the sudden feeling of oneness, love, belonging, or union with an individual person, a family, a team, a nation, nature, the cosmos, God, or a kitten."

Okay, sure, but isn't that just "love?" Don't laugh. I don't know emotions.

We experience it at some of the most important events of our lives – births, weddings, and funerals – and it is commonly exploited by writers, directors and marketeers to enhance the emotional impact of their stories.

Of course it's exploited by advertisers. What isn't? I imagine it's like when the ad includes a cute puppy for no other reason except to get people to think "what a cute puppy!"

Those of a cynical disposition may find the concept cloying and sentimental...

This person of a cynical disposition doesn't try to dismiss emotions.

...but the latest research suggests that kama muta can be a powerful force in politics.

And that is, in part, what makes me cynical.

“All psychologists assumed that crying meant sadness,” says Fiske, yet the tears that Schubert was describing occurred during positive events.

I, um, wasn't aware that psychologists assumed that crying always meant sadness. In fact, if they did, I'd question all of psychology because it's pretty clear even to me that people can cry from relief or joy.

At the same time, Fiske began looking for a term that would neatly describe the emotion they were hoping to capture. After much searching, he settled on kama muta, an old Sanskrit term that means “moved by love”.

Hm. Like the Kama Sutra, I guess? Did Sanskrit have different words for different kinds of love? Because the Kama Sutra is explicitly about one certain kind of love, and it also involves movement.

Anyway, I mostly saved this article because it's tangentially about writing, which sometimes involves manipulating a reader's emotions. For that reason, I'm skipping a bunch here.

Storytellers across time have evoked kama muta to captivate audiences. Fiske believes that we can trace it back to Odysseus’s return home to Ithaca after 20 years of turmoil, and his ultimate reunion with his wife. “It’s clear from the text that they feel this emotion,” he says. Today, many people report experiencing it when Wall-E reunites with Eve in the 2008 romantic science fiction film.

Or I suppose you could just watch Up.

Anyway, yes, even I have felt that emotion. And yet, I wonder: does giving it a name diminish its impact?

© Copyright 2025 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Robert Waltz has granted InkSpot.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
... powered by: Writing.Com
Online Writing Portfolio * Creative Writing Online