Archivo para abril, 2019

El análisis de la Historia Reciente del capitalismo, de sus transformaciones, se realiza en la presente investigación en un contexto específico, el del neoliberalismo chileno, diferenciándose uno autoritario, el del régimen cívico-militar (1973-1989) y otro relativamente democrático, desde 1990. Se centra en el desarrollo emocional de sus miedos sociopolíticos, específicamente el terror. Para ello, desde el cuerpo como punto de llegada y de partida de las prácticas capitalistas estudiadas, se describen fenómenos integrados como el uso de la memoria, los miedos derivativos, las configuraciones rememoracionales y protencionales, la experimentación del dolor, la producción de violencia intro-estrospectiva y el afecto a la espera, vinculándolos a prácticas como el consumo mimético y a efectos en la producción de sentido y en la transformación de la identidad, que conducen al padecimiento del terror como felicidad. Se concluye que su incidencia es en un capitalismo, de suyo imprevisible, que se torna previsible, posibilitando la regulación y autorregulación de la civilización neoliberal, pero también la lesión definitiva de la democracia liberal ilustrada y la ampliación de la producción de subjetividad para generar comienzos y hospitalidad.

Editorial: ESEditora.
Autor: Freddy Timmermann López

Páginas: 142 | ISBN 978-987-3713-36-1

Formatos de descarga:

PDF | E-books readers: | MOBI | EPUB

Vista previa:

New Journal Announcement and Call for Papers

Por Administrador 12 abril, 2019COMENTAR

Emotions and Society

Volume 1, issue 1,
coming in May2019

Editors-in-Chief

Mary Holmes, University of Edinburgh, UK
Åsa Wettergren, Gothenburg University, Sweden

Managing Editors
Nathan Manning, University of Adelaide, Australi

Bristol University Pressis pleased to announce an exciting new journal for 2019, Emotions and Society.

 

Aims and Scope

Emotions and Society aims to publish high-quality, original peer-reviewed articles which advance theoretical and empirical understanding of emotions in social life.It is associated with the European Sociological Association(ESA)Research Network on Emotions, but seekssubmissions from a wide range of international authors writing in this area. The sociology ofemotions has developed uniqueperspectives on emotionsthat attend to the social construction of emotions and the ways in which emotions are embedded in social structures and inhere in social processes. The Journal seeksto expand thelargely unexhausted potential for developing innovative approaches not only to emotions per se, but through it to the socialgenerally..All methodological approaches to studying emotions are welcome, but they should demonstrate rigour and be framed in ways that will be of interest to sociologically inclined scholars. A key feature of the Journal will be to develop both a uniquely sociological perspective on emotions, while alsoengaging in interdisciplinary exchanges. This interdisciplinary character will emerge not only from the interdisciplinarityof present scholarly debates on emotions, but from the diversity of disciplines represented inthe ESA Research Network.We welcomesubmissions from neighbouring disciplines, especially cultural studies, history, philosophy and social psychology.Psychological social psychology of emotions is quite well represented in existing journals and papers will be considered only insofar as their focus is interactional rather than biological, and the same reservation goes for psychology of emotions at large. The Journal seeks to publish articles based on original research into the social aspects of emotionsand emotional life. This may include contributions to theoretical debates in the area. Substantial review articles may also be considered.Principally we are looking for theoretical or theoretically informed empirical papers that engage with key concepts and debates of interest to sociologistsof emotion, even if they do so from outside the discipline.

Call for Papers

Be among the first to publish in Emotions and Society.Our first issues include commissioned articles by Arlie Hochschild, Ian Burkitt, Debbie Gould, Peter Stearns, Randall Collins, Eva Illouz, Helena Flam, Jack Barbalet.Emotions and Societyis now open for mon-commissioned articles.

For more informationabout the journal andon how to submit:
https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/journals/emotions-and-society