Institutionalizing passion in world politics: fear and empathy

TitleInstitutionalizing passion in world politics: fear and empathy
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsCrawford, Neta C.
JournalInternational Theory
Volume6
Issue3
Pagination535-557
ISSN1752-9719, 1752-9727
AbstractEmotions are a ubiquitous intersubjective element of world politics. Yet, passions are often treated as fleeting, private, reactive, and not amenable to systematic analysis. Institutionalization links the private and individual to the collective and political. Passions may become enduring through institutionalization, and thus, as much as characterizing private reactions to external phenomena, emotions structure the social world. To illustrate this argument, I describe how fear and empathy may be institutionalized, discuss the relationship between these emotions, and suggest how empathy may be both a mirror and potential antidote to individual and institutionalized fear.
URLhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-theory/article/abs/institutionalizing-passion-in-world-politics-fear-and-empathy/02D256F7A3EEBB130D527DA98BC76240
DOI10.1017/S1752971914000256
Short TitleInstitutionalizing passion in world politics
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