Emotional Bodies. A Workshop on the Historical Performativity of Emotions
CALL FOR PAPERS
EMOTIONAL BODIES
A Workshop on the
Historical Performativity of Emotions
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20-22 October, 2014
Louis Jeantet Auditorium
Geneva, Switzerland
Dolores Martin Moruno - IEH2, University of Geneva
Sophie Milquet - Department of French Modern
Studies, University of Lausanne
Beatriz Pichel - PHRC, de Montfort University
Deadline: 1st July,
2014
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The idea that the body is the site in
which emotions are expressed is an old one in Western Culture. We manifest fear
through trembling, embarrassment while blushing or demonstrate love by showing
that the pulse quickens and breathing becomes irregular. However, we cannot
take for granted the existence of a natural relationship between emotions and
these bodily translations. For instance, while the passions were considered in
the Early Modern period to be the expression of the movements of the soul, as
well as powerful agents shaping bodies in health and disease, late nineteenth
century and early twentieth century physiologists and psychologists would
discover that the material body was an effect of “the immediate and local
emotions produced in the laboratory” (Dror, 1998). From this historical
perspective, the relationships between bodies and emotions seem to be far from
being universal, as they are also socially and institutionally produced in
specific historical contexts.
This three-day workshop seeks to challenge
the idea that emotions invariably correspond to certain bodily expressions, by
showing that they can alternatively be understood as cultural practices that
have the affective power of transforming reality by creating emotional
bodies. On the one hand, bodies will be interpreted as an expressive medium
that allows us to “negotiate the boundaries and crossings of self and society”
(Porter, 2001). These malleable boundaries of the body will be understood in
connection with the changing meaning of social norms, cultural codes and
institutions, but especially as the result of the work of emotions. On the
other, we propose the understanding of emotions as cultural practices
that do things. This performativity of emotions has been
stressed by scholars working on the history of the French revolution (Reddy,
1997; 2001), the history of medicine (Bound-Alberti, 2006), political theory
(Ahmed, 2004) and literary theory (Labanyi, 2010) as one of the most fruitful
lines of research in emotion history.
Taking the metaphor of the body as
starting point, this conference aims at discussing new possibilities to
enhancing our understanding of the historical performativity of emotions as
agents that have generated meaning to physical, social, political, artistic and
literary bodies. Therefore, the expression “emotional bodies” may be regarded
as an analytical category enabling us to explore how different historical
conceptions of emotions (e.g. sentiments, passions, affects and feelings), as
well as the practices and objects associated with them, had produced systems of
symbolic and physical relations which we understood here as “bodies” with a
multidisciplinary purpose. We invite
scholars working in any historical period to focus on one of the following
topics; each of them related to the creation of scientific, socio-political and
artistic bodies.
Producing emotional bodies in the
sciences. Observation, experimentation and diagnosis have been
historically used as techniques of scientific standardisation for defining the body
in love, pain or pleasure. For instance, passions have been
identified since Aristotle as powerful agents shaping human and animal
physiognomies. Particularly, the body in love has been defined by determining
the state of the pulse and the redness of countenance in Ancient medicine or
through its twentieth-century conceptualisation in terms of hormone adrenaline
and excitement. In which ways have scientific practices normalized emotional
expressions throughout history? Have scientists’ emotions affected their work
in hospitals or laboratories? How have emotions of non-speaking bodies such as
those of infants and animals been scientifically categorized? Have scientific
approaches on emotions penetrated into popular culture through novels, theatre,
photography or film? We are looking for proposals that can contribute to
shedding light on what extent the scientific production of emotions has shaped
bodies that are recognisable in everyday life.
Emotions as sites for social
exchange and political change. From the
politics of fear examined by Joanna Bourke, to Anne-Claude Ambroise-Rendu and
Christian Delaporte’s analysis of indignation and Sara Ahmed’s study on
happiness, the collective dimension of emotions has been stressed as a
potential site for social activism and political change. Is there any
connection between the emergence of emotional styles and the production of the
revolutionary bodies? What kind of materials and sources do we need to explore
in order to reconstruct the emotions of the crowd? Has the performance of
different emotions contributed to defining new bodies such as those of the
feminist, anti-racist and queer movements? In this panel, we would like to
address the question about the possibility of creating new social and political
bodies through the performance of collective emotions.
The affective power of
literature, photography and film. Scholars working in
literary and photographic studies have claimed an affective turn in order to
look at texts and cultural productions from the point of view of what they can
do, rather than what they mean (Labanyi, 2010; Edwards, 2012; Bouju and Gefen,
2012). Thus, for example, a great number of novels, photographs and films of
war have mobilised our empathy towards a humanitarian sensibility (Taithe, 2006).
It was not long ago that Stéphane Hessel’s Indignez-vous! reminded
us that emotions could also be a call for social and political action. How we
should understand the performativity of aesthetic emotions? What role have they
played in the creation of broader emotional regimes (e.g. mobilization of
empathy, compassion or pity in the actual rise of the victim figure)? Can
books, photographs or works of art be considered as “affective objects”
produced by our sensory, haptic engagements with them? We encourage scholars
interested in discussing the affective power of literary texts, photographic
and film documents or artistic creations to present a proposal exploring the
ways in which these objects can be interpreted as emotional bodies.
If you are interested in participating
in this workshop, please send us a proposal of no more than 300 words for a 20
minutes presentation to emotionalbodies@gmail.com by
the 1st, July 2014.
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Dolores Martin Moruno - IEH2, University
of Geneva
Sophie Milquet - Dept. French Modern
Studies, University of Lausanne
Beatriz Pichel - PHRC, de Montfort
University
Un cordial saludo,
Dolores Martín-Moruno
iEH2 (Institut Éthique, Histoire, Humanités)
Faculté de Médecine
Université de Genève
iEH2 (Institut Éthique, Histoire, Humanités)
Faculté de Médecine
Université de Genève
+41223795981