Emotions, affects and the production of social life

The British Journal of Sociology
Nick J Fox

Abstract

While many aspects of social life possess an emotional component, sociology needs to explore explicitly the part emotions play in producing the social world and human history. This paper turns away from individualistic and anthropocentric emphases upon the experience of feelings and emotions, attending instead to an exploration of flows of 'affect' (meaning simply a capacity to affect or be affected) between bodies, things, social institutions and abstractions. It establishes a materialist sociology of affects that acknowledges emotions as a part, but only a part, of a more generalized affective flow that produces bodies and the social world. From this perspective, emotions are not a peculiarly remarkable outcome of the confluence of biology and culture, but part of a continuum of affectivity that links human bodies to their physical and social environment. This enhances sociological understanding of the part emotions play in shaping actions and capacities in many settings of sociological concern.

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Jun 23, 2004·Nature Reviews. Neuroscience·Tim Dalgleish
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Sep 3, 2008·Sociology of Health & Illness·Nick J Fox, Katie J Ward

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Citations

May 21, 2016·Nursing Philosophy : an International Journal for Healthcare Professionals·Benny Goodman
Sep 5, 2017·The British Journal of Sociology·Carol VincentHumera Iqbal
Sep 18, 2018·British Journal of Health Psychology·Darren LangdridgePaul Flowers
Nov 9, 2018·The British Journal of Sociology·Alex BroomZarnie Lwin
Nov 9, 2018·Nursing Ethics·Linda ShieldsJudith Anderson
Oct 27, 2018·Omega·Jane Ribbens McCarthyJoséphine Wouango

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