Full Description
The study of how emotions are socially patterned is a young and promising field within sociology. This handbook offers a sociological examination of the lived impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic through culture(s) of emotion - from hope to anger, optimism to grief, and courage to boredom.
The Emerald Handbook of the Sociology of Emotions for a Post-Pandemic World considers the dynamics and structures of affect as they have been experienced by local and global populations in a time of global health crisis. Advancing a theoretical agenda in the sociology of emotions and drawing from empirical evidence of emotional impacts, the authors cover a range of philosophical and methodological questions about how to study emotions, and why doing so is critical in turbulent times.
Including policy and planning insights for how to reconcile our emotional lives and collective experiences in a post-pandemic world, this collection is a refreshing contribution to a new and exciting sub-discipline; and is a compelling read for theorists, researchers, and students of the social, cultural, and political sciences.
Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction - Pandemic-Emotions, Ontologies of Uncertainty, and Imagining Emotional Futures; Paul R. Ward and Kristen Foley
Chapter 2. Grief: Challenges to death, dying, disposal and grief in corona times; Michael Hviid Jacobsen
Chapter 3. Hoping in a COVID-19 world; Patrick Brown and Marci Cottingham
Chapter 4. Nostalgia and the corona pandemic: A tranquil feeling in a fearful world; Krystine I. Batcho, Michael Hviid Jacobsen, and Janelle L. Wilson
Chapter 5. Courage, Risks and Dating in the COVID-19 Crisis; Poul Poder
Chapter 6. Is Happiness a Fantasy only for the Privileged? Exploring Women's Classed chances of being happy through alcohol consumption during COVID-19; Belinda Lunnay, Megan Warin, Kristen Foley, and Paul R. Ward
Chapter 7. Pandemic anger and semiotic meaning-making of loss of lifeworld freedoms; Kingsley Whittenbury
Chapter 8. Imagining Intimacy after COVID; Clare Southerton and Marianne Clark
Chapter 9. Constructing Heroism in the Time of Covid; Amir Marvasti and Travis Saylor
Chapter 10. Boredom, screens, and homesickness amidst the crisis; Patrick Gamsby
Chapter 11. Feeling and (Dis)trusting in Modern, Post-Truth, Pandemic Times; Kristen Foley, Belinda Lunnay, and Paul R. Ward
Chapter 12. 'I want to remember how nice it felt to talk to someone': Optimism and positive emotions in the linguistic reconstruction of COVID-19 lockdown experiences in the UK; Stella Bullo, Lexi Webster, and Jasmine Hearn
Chapter 13. Fear and Loathing in an Indonesian Island: an Ethnographic Study of Community Responses to the COVID-19 Pandemic; Christopher Raymond and Paul R. Ward
Chapter 14. Popular soup kitchens: loving, feeding, and sharing; Adrian Scribano