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Introduction to the Special Issue: Emotions and Mobilities: Gendered, Temporal and Spatial Representations

Version 2 2024-03-12, 20:50
Version 1 2024-03-01, 12:31
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:50 authored by Marianela Barrios Aquino, Nicola ChanamutoNicola Chanamuto, Anastasia Christou
<p>Emotions are increasingly recognised as a fundamental dimension of human mobility. Indeed, there has been sustained and increasing scholarly interest in the intersection between migration and emotion over the last two decades. Theoretical and empirical contributions in this area have advanced our understanding of migration experiences in their diversity. Furthermore, viewing migrants’ lived experiences through an emotions lens can reveal a variety of hidden inequalities, unsettle hegemonic discourses and reveal practices of resistance. Perceptions of social categories such as ethnicity, gender, sexuality and age are shaped by emotions and it is therefore valuable to ‘investigate how certain emotions “stick” to certain bodies or flow and traverse space’. Considering emotions as contextual and intersubjective, rather than personal and individual, draws attention to the emotional construction of political events and the politicisation of everyday life, both of which are relevant to understandings of international migration. Moreover, the contributions included in this issue demonstrate the capacity of emotions to create and shape social landscapes. This constitutes resistance to what Alison Jaggar terms ‘emotional hegemony’, or the instrumentalisation of emotions to serve the interests of dominant groups and discredit subordinate groups. Whilst this special issue may be of particular interest to migration scholars, a broader audience will recognise the political anxieties resulting from a blurring of the borders between ‘here’ and ‘there’. Indeed, emotions are an essential element of the formation, reproduction and destruction of borders and boundaries, communities, nation-states and individual experiences and, consequently, are proof of the fictitious fragmentation of time, space and place.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Emotions: History, Culture, Society

Volume

6

Issue

2

Pages/Article Number

201-214

Publisher

Brill

ISSN

2206-7485

eISSN

2208-522X

Date Submitted

2022-12-20

Date Accepted

2022-09-13

Date of First Publication

2022-12-02

Date of Final Publication

2022-12-02

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-12-19

ePrints ID

52866

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