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Affective Dynamics of Public Discourse on Religious Recognition in Secular Societies

Public Spheres of Resonance (Cover)

Public Spheres of Resonance (Cover)

Scheve, Christian von; Walter-Jochum, Robert – 2019

Debates about the status and recognition of religious minorities in contemporary Western societies frequently evoke the notion of “religious feelings”, although it is hardly ever clear what these feelings are and who actually experiences them. Drawing on analyses of selected debates in German public discourse, this chapter proposes a theoretical and methodological approach to understand invocations of religious feelings primarily as elements of the affective dynamics of public discourse on religious recognition in secular societies. Departing from the links between language, recognition, and affect, and drawing on existing studies on (the political manufacture of) religious feelings and injury, the chapter suggests four analytical perspectives to understand the affective dynamics of public discourse: the uses of emotion words and concepts in language, the recourse to religious feelings as a novel kind of discourse operating beyond the established political language, varieties of hate speech, and the phenomenal experience of feelings and emotions.

Title
Affective Dynamics of Public Discourse on Religious Recognition in Secular Societies
Author
Scheve, Christian von; Walter-Jochum, Robert
Date
2019
Identifier
DOI: 10.4324/9780429466533-8
Appeared in
Fleig, Scheve (Ed.) 2019 – Public Spheres of Resonance
Language
eng
Type
Text
Size or Duration
pp. 98–116