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Full Description
This book illustrates the theoretical relevance of emotions to analyse and interpret contemporary events and societies. Emotions explain social phenomena while providing critical and analytical tools to challenge dominant or conventional interpretations of them. Drawing on examples of empirical research on emotions, it examines the long-standing sociological significance of emotions, some of the most recent theoretical and methodological advances, and the importance of fruitful interdisciplinary contaminations. The book will appeal to students, scholars, and professionals interested in the intersection of emotions, society, and social change.
Contents
PART I _ Defining emotions from different disciplinary perspectives.- Introduction.- Defining emotions from different disciplinary perspectives.- Feeling Modernity: the early theorisations on emotions from the classics of sociology.- Conceptualising emotions sociologically: contemporary theories on emotions.- Between Positivist and Constructionist approaches, micro- and macro- levels of analysis.- Emotions in different historical and cultural contexts.- Love Studies and Black Feminist Theory.- Rethinking the sociological relevance of emotions in light of recent social and political phenomena.- PART II _ The theoretical and political relevance of emotions: research areas.- Emotions and Social Control: Shame, Humiliation, Embarrassment, and Conformity.- Emotions and Politics: The Social Construction of Emotions in the Public Sphere.- Emotions and Social Class.- Emotions and Capitalism.- Emotions and Violence.- Emotions, Technologies, and Media.- Emotions, Relationships, and Intimacies.- Emotions, Citizenship, and Social Change.- Concluding Thoughts: Future Prospects.



