368 Pages
    by Routledge

    368 Pages
    by Routledge

    This international collection discusses how the individualised, reflexive, late modern era has changed the way we experience and act on our emotions. Divided into four sections that include studies ranging across multiple continents and centuries, Emotions in Late Modernity does the following:







    1. Demonstrates an increased awareness and experience of emotional complexity in late modernity by challenging the legal emotional/rational divide; positive/negative concepts of emotional valence; sociological/ philosophical/psychological divisions around emotion, morality and gender; and traditional understandings of love and loneliness.






    2. Reveals tension between collectivised and individualised-privatised emotions in investigating ‘emotional sharing’ and individualised responsibility for anger crimes in courtrooms; and the generation of emotional energy and achievement emotions in classrooms.






    3. Debates the increasing mediation of emotions by contrasting their historical mediation (through texts and bodies) with contemporary digital mediation of emotions in classroom teaching, collective mobilisations (e.g. riots) and film and documentary representations.






    4. Demonstrates reflexive micro and macro management of emotions, with examinations of the ‘politics of fear’ around asylum seeking and religious subjects, and collective commitment to climate change mitigation.


    The first collection to investigate the changing nature of emotional experience in contemporary times, Emotions in Late Modernity will appeal to students and researchers interested in fields such as sociology of emotions, cultural studies, political science and psychology.

    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

    Biography

    Roger Patulny is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Social Research Methods at the University of Wollongong, Australia.



    Alberto Bellocchi is a Principal Research Fellow and Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.



    Rebecca E. Olson is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology in the School of Social Science at the University of Queensland, Australia.



    Sukhmani Khorana is Senior Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies at the University of Wollongong, Australia.



    Jordan McKenzie is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Wollongong, Australia.



    Michelle Peterie is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Queensland, Australia; and current co-convener of The Australian Sociological Association’s Sociology of Emotions and Affect Thematic Group.