historia

All posts tagged historia

EMOCIONES Y CIENCIAS SOCIALES EN EL S. XX: LA PRECUELA DEL GIRO AFECTIVO

Giazú Enciso Domínguez y  Alí Lara

Resumen: El Giro Afectivo es un movimiento innovador que está transformando la producción de conocimiento basado en el estudio del afecto y la emoción. En este trabajo sostenemos que hay un punto que no se ha desarrollado, una deuda con el origen del giro que es necesario saldar para comprender el papel actual de los estudios del afecto y la emoción en la academia. Así, nuestra propuesta es una precuela que narra lo que sucedió con el estudio de las emociones al interior de las Ciencias Sociales durante el siglo XX. Para contar la historia antes de la Historia, articulamos esta precuela en la que sostenemos que las condiciones de posibilidad para el Giro Afectivo se pueden comprender a través de siete líneas de estudio de las emociones que se desarrollaron previamente. Nuestra precuela explica el presente desde el pasado, invocando siete aproximaciones al estudio de la emoción: El Socioconstruccionismo, la Psicología Social Discursiva, los Estudios Culturales de las Emociones, las Emocionologías, la Sociología Interpretativa, la Sociolingüística de las Emociones, y los Estudios Feministas de las Emociones.

Palabras clave: Giro Afectivo, Emociones, Ciencias Sociales, Precuela, Historia.

 

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International Journal For The History And Theory of Emotions

Passions in context

In recent years, the emotions have gained increased attention in a wide variety of disciplines including anthropology, history, sociology, political science, legal theory, criminology, economics, cultural and media studies as well as literature. The attention goes along with a reevaluation. In philosophy for example, a discipline that often not only ignored the emotions, but viewed them with contempt, they are now considered as a positive force. For centuries, reason embodied the philosophical ideal; the emotions were seen as disruptive to the very endeavor of philosophy and were therefore to be combated and overcome. Now this rigid opposition between (good) reason and (bad) inclination is not only abandoned in favor of a view that promotes the rationality of feeling, but emotions are even regarded as something necessary for approaching the world and making moral judgments. This view is supported by recent discoveries in the natural sciences, particularly in neurology. This development has in turn built new bridges between the arts – the traditional representatives of the emotions – and science, with researchers becoming ever more curious about their connection. This growing interest in the history and theory of emotions is now both interdisciplinary and international. In particular in the English speaking world and in Germany are developing special centers for the research in the history and theory of emotions. Until now this interest has lacked a forum where contributions with such a wide orientation can be published. Passions in Context will be such a forum.

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The Carnival of Lost emotions

 The Centre for the History of the Emotions, supported by the Wellcome Trust, staged the first ever Carnival of Lost Emotions in Brain Awareness Week 2013. This was the result!

This project was supported by a Wellcome Trust Public Engagement with Neuroscience grant. Collaboration with the DANA Foundation (Brain Awareness Week), the National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement and Bart’s Pathology Museum helped make the event what it was.

Writers and Cast: Sarah Chaney, Åsa Jansson, Chris Millard, Rebecca O’Neal, Tom Quick, Claire Trenery, Jennifer Wallis.
Show devised by Chris Millard & Rebecca O’Neal.
Filming and video editing by David Anderson.