Wetherell, Margaret (2012) “Chapter 5: Solidifying Affect: Structures of feeling, habitus and emotional capital” In Affect and Emotion

Wetherell, Margaret. 2012. “Chapter 5: Solidifying Affect: Structures of feeling, habitus and emotional capital” In Affect and Emotion: A New Social Science Understanding. London: Sage. (102-119)

  • Introduction
    • personal affective order and social affective order
    • patterns are difficult to detect; can be grasped via reflection or when the pattern changes, that one noticed the existence of the pattern
    • patterns are changing.
    • So, identifying and stabilizing affective patterns need “retrospective work”
      • such a work is both describing and prescribing
      • prescribing in a sense to institutionalize the patterns
    • Bourdieu’s “habitus”
    • advocate: “affective intersectional” approach
  • Habitus and Embodied Dispositions (Bourdieu’s basic concept of “habitus”)
    • social life is both individual and ordered
      • individual: about agency, improvisation and strategy
      • ordered: repetition, constraint and routine
    • “habitus:” openness and structure
    • past practice is embodied in individuals because they acquire sediment of dispositions
      • dispositions guide future conduct
      • the past into the future
      • when habitus shapes: some possibilities are practiced; other possibilities recede
    • New members: to form new patterns and to learn and practice
    • Body: memory-jogger, an accomplice of social reproduction, towards a future while muting other possibilities
    • Some notion of determinism in Bourdieu’s concept of “habitus”
  • Affect and Habitus
    • emotion: non-conscious aspects of habitus
      • emotion is not conscious
    • “Affect is something the body does; it is pure action” (107)
    • Reed-Danahay argues: Bourdieu blurs distinctions between cognition and affect (knowledge and feeling)
    • Other researches on affect is not satisfying, either
    • Thus, Wetherell: a social psychology of affective embodied practice is needed to fill the gap
      • Wetherell focuses on practiced affect, or in situated affective episodes
  • Cultural Capital and Social Distinction
    • Bourdieu: the social constructions frame habitus in classification
    • social value and cultural capital in habitus
      • thus, the formation of preferences
  • Affect and Social Value
    • inside or outside of habitus: emotions, such as likes and disgust
  • Affect and Social Class
    • specific affective style in class
  • Emotional Capital
    • some affective styles: advantage
    • Illouz (1997): emotional capital: the capacity to manage emotions, or to be calm
    • Reay: strong emotions can have benefits, too. For example, in education
    • class is relevant, since without cultural and economic capital, people from the underprivileged groups cannot turn strong affect into something positive.
    • but class is not determined
    • Bourdieu’s theory is from a middle-class position
    • Skeggs:
      • middles classes: affect in an exchange relations
      • working classes: no exchange value in affect, but only pure “use-value”
  • An Overview and Some Problems
    • (1) “affect can maintain, increase and diminish power, influence and social value”
    • (2) affect is about the sediments in habitus, so that individuals practice affect without thinking of it.
    • The Social psychology of affective practice
      • danger of determinism of affect
      • easy to read emotion as natural or corporeal, as something unreflective and non-conscious
      • But, what we forget is the duality: open and evolving, constraining and could be otherwise
      • suggestion: treat affect as practice, to admit affect is highly varied
    • Heterogeneity and plurality
      • habitus to be plural
      • Bourdieu’s habitus: too over-deterministic
        • but the affective practices and social groupings will not be tidy
        • identity can be complicated
      • so a wide range of affective space
        • (1) some are predictable
        • (2) some not stable
        • To be open to possibilities
  • Affective Intersectionality