Enthusiasm: Emotional Practices of Conviction in Modern Germany: Emotions in History
Autor Monique Scheeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 oct 2020
Din seria Emotions in History
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198863595
ISBN-10: 0198863594
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Emotions in History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198863594
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Emotions in History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
I highly recommend this book not only to readers with a particular focus on emotions, religious studies and social sciences, but also to those who have a broader interest in the role of emotions in the wide field of cultural history, media studies and the arts.
In plain, beautiful prose Scheer cuts through much of the noise of recent theorizing about emotion in history to brilliantly demonstrate how taking enthusiasm as emotional practice clarifies analysis of both religious belief and unbelief. This is a rigorous, deeply sourced, and welcome provocation to the history of emotions and a major statement about the study of religion and emotion.
This book has much to teach us — about Protestant Christianity and feeling, yes, but also about bodies and practices, about modernity and enchantment, about politics and the nature of conviction. Scheer has produced a stunning, truly multidisciplinary study, poised to establish itself as a centerpiece of conversation in a broad range of humanistic fields.
In this remarkable study, Monique Scheer bridges the gap between anthropology and history by combining archival research and field work to examine two centuries of emotional practices among German Protestants. Her treatment of emotion as "embodied thought" (Michelle Rosaldo's memorable term) and of enthusiasm as that which mediates between conviction and practice will be of great interest to a broad audience. Her grasp of a wide range of theoretical and philosophical literature is impressive. The revealing testimony of her informants is memorable. Every page is packed with insightful remarks. Readers will learn, for example, that charismatic and mainline Protestants have more in common than they think, and that many atheists, for that matter, rely on a similar framework of self-understanding.
In addition to being written with both clarity and mastery, Monique Scheer's Enthusiasm makes an important intervention that calls us to think about the naturalized status of German theory in the study of religion. Scheer doesn't just take Kant's or Schleiermacher's or Weber's word for it. Instead, she shows how the long German tradition of thinking about religion and emotion together has shaped the study of religion as a discipline, as well as the things and the people that we study as religion or religious. Read this book!
This amazing book offers a fresh historical-ethnographic exploration of the emotional styles deployed in the Protestant spectrum and their — barely realized — embodied sediments in secular emotional registers and sensibilities in Germany. This insightful analysis of Protestantism's role in shaping how people "do" emotions is of major interest not only for scholars of religion, but for anyone seeking to understand the power of emotional styles in mobilizing people. Deploying "enthusiasm" as a productive concept to analyse how people become dedicated to a cause and convinced of a sense of truth, Monique Scheer opens up new vistas for the scholarship on religion and emotion beyond the secular-religious divide. Wow!
In plain, beautiful prose Scheer cuts through much of the noise of recent theorizing about emotion in history to brilliantly demonstrate how taking enthusiasm as emotional practice clarifies analysis of both religious belief and unbelief. This is a rigorous, deeply sourced, and welcome provocation to the history of emotions and a major statement about the study of religion and emotion.
This book has much to teach us — about Protestant Christianity and feeling, yes, but also about bodies and practices, about modernity and enchantment, about politics and the nature of conviction. Scheer has produced a stunning, truly multidisciplinary study, poised to establish itself as a centerpiece of conversation in a broad range of humanistic fields.
In this remarkable study, Monique Scheer bridges the gap between anthropology and history by combining archival research and field work to examine two centuries of emotional practices among German Protestants. Her treatment of emotion as "embodied thought" (Michelle Rosaldo's memorable term) and of enthusiasm as that which mediates between conviction and practice will be of great interest to a broad audience. Her grasp of a wide range of theoretical and philosophical literature is impressive. The revealing testimony of her informants is memorable. Every page is packed with insightful remarks. Readers will learn, for example, that charismatic and mainline Protestants have more in common than they think, and that many atheists, for that matter, rely on a similar framework of self-understanding.
In addition to being written with both clarity and mastery, Monique Scheer's Enthusiasm makes an important intervention that calls us to think about the naturalized status of German theory in the study of religion. Scheer doesn't just take Kant's or Schleiermacher's or Weber's word for it. Instead, she shows how the long German tradition of thinking about religion and emotion together has shaped the study of religion as a discipline, as well as the things and the people that we study as religion or religious. Read this book!
This amazing book offers a fresh historical-ethnographic exploration of the emotional styles deployed in the Protestant spectrum and their — barely realized — embodied sediments in secular emotional registers and sensibilities in Germany. This insightful analysis of Protestantism's role in shaping how people "do" emotions is of major interest not only for scholars of religion, but for anyone seeking to understand the power of emotional styles in mobilizing people. Deploying "enthusiasm" as a productive concept to analyse how people become dedicated to a cause and convinced of a sense of truth, Monique Scheer opens up new vistas for the scholarship on religion and emotion beyond the secular-religious divide. Wow!
Notă biografică
Monique Scheer is Professor of Historical and Cultural Anthropology (Empirische Kulturwissenschaft) at the University of Tübingen, where she also serves as Vice-Rector for International Affairs. Most recently, she has co-edited Secular Bodies, Affects and Emotions: European Perspectives (Bloomsbury, 2019) with Nadia Fadil and Birgitte Schepelern Johansen and The Public Work of Christmas: Difference and Belonging in Multicultural Societies (McGill-Queens UP, 2019) with Pamela E. Klassen. She is also co-editor-in-chief of the journal Ethnologia Europaea and on the editorial board of Geschichte and Gesellschaft.