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Full Description
Combining the conceptual tools of interactionist and social constructionist positions, this book presents an in-depth investigation of emotions in digital interactions. Through the central case study of online bereavement communities for women who have suffered perinatal loss, this volume highlights the significance of affective sanctioning as constitutive of group dynamics and practice. The authors chart the emergence of a new ethnopsychology of motherhood-the category of 'Angels' Mothers'-arising from the localized practices of a community whose experience of grief is otherwise disenfranchised. Through their detailed theoretical exploration of the centrality of micro-situational dynamics, alongside the rich empirical illustration of collectively shared feeling rules and norms, Rafanell and Sawicka develop a naturalistic approach to the analysis of empirical data, providing insights for policy-making interventions.
Contents
1 IntroductionPart I Emotions, Social Interaction, and Structural Phenomena2 What Counts as Social Reality?3 Emotions as Products of the Social: Extrinsic Accounts4 Emotions as Constitutive Methods: An Intrinsic Account of the Social5 Emergence of Collectives as Status Groups6 Methodology and Methods of Data CollectionPart II The Emergence of a New Ethnopsychology of Motherhood7 Emotional Deviance and New Emotional Reality8 Concluding Points: Theoretical Models, Social Reality, and Everyday Practice