Emotions in late modernity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Emotions in late modernity
(Routledge studies in the sociology of emotions / edited by Mary Holmes and Julie Brownlie)
Routledge, 2019
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
i) This is the first collection to investigate the changing nature of emotional experience in contemporary late modern society, and does so through investigations canvassing a broad range of the history and sociology of emotions.
ii) - It is a multi-disciplinary book, with studies from sociology, history, literature, cultural studies, film studies, educational studies, health studies, and law studies.
iii) It is an international collection, with contributions from the US, UK, Sweden, Germany, and Australia, and will appeal to authors from each of these countries, as well as from the relevant emotions research networks (ASA, ESA, TASA, etc)
iv) It has contributions ranging across time periods from the medieval ages to contemporary, late modern times.
v) - It includes contributions from several prominent scholars of emotion in historical and contemporary times - Jonathan Turner, Christian Von Scheve, Kathryn Lively, Stina Bergman Blix, Asa Wettergran, Andrew Lynch, Elizabeth Stephens, and with a foreword by Jack Barbalet.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Emotions in late modernity
Section One: Emotional complexity and complex understanding of emotions
2. Emotive-cognitive rationality, background emotions and emotion work
3. Conceptualising valences in emotion theories: A sociological approach
4. Emotion and morality: A sociological reading of the philosophy of emotion
5. Sociological approaches to the study of gender and emotion in late modernity: Culture, structure, & identity
6. Loneliness and love in late modernity: Sites of tension and resistance
Section Two: Individualised emotions as private responsibility
7. Emotions and criminal law: New perspectives on an enduring presence
8. Undramatic emotions in learning: A sociological model
9. Emotions and the criminal law: Anger and the defence of provocation
10. Achievement emotions: A control-value theory perspective
Section Three: Mediated Emotions
11. Mediating English historical evolution in Charles Kingsley's Hereward the Wake (1866)
12. Affect and automation: A critical genealogy of the emotions
13. The digital mediation of emotions in late modernity
14. Public feeling: the entanglement of emotion and technology in the 2011 riots
15. Store feelings: Emotions, culture, media
16. Screening the refugee: Freedom stories and the performance of empathy in an "emotional community"
Section Four: Micro and macro-reflexively managed emotions
17. Impartiality and emotion in everyday judicial practice
18. Power (con)passion and trust in interprofessional healthcare
19. Compassion and power: (emotional) reflexivity in asylum seeker friendship programs
20. Affective dynamics of conflicts between religious practice and secular self-understanding: Insights from the male circumcision and 'Burkini' debates
21. Towards 'keystone feelings': An affective architectonics for climate grief
Conclusion, Emotion in late modernity
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