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Significant Emotions: Rhetoric and Social Problems in a Vulnerable Age

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Overview

Significant Emotions is a piercing examination of the rising use of emotional signifiers in public debate and the rhetoric of an increasingly expansive array of social problems. Building on ideas developed in Ashley Frawley’s previous book, Semiotics of Happiness, it examines in detail the ‘emotional turn’ across the social sciences and the broader cultural rise of the ‘age of emotion’ and its influence on how we talk about and approach new social issues.

The book explores the rise of supposedly ‘positive’ emotional signifiers that have gained prominence as powerful causes of and solutions to nearly every social ill-from promoting self-esteem, happiness and mindfulness to concerns for well-being and mental health. Conceptualizing the rise and comparative decline of these emotional signifiers as cycles of discovery, adoption, expansion, and exhaustion, the book argues that rather than calling into question one or another of these signifiers, it is necessary to penetrate deeper to the underlying cultural currents that drive their adoption and contribute to their rhetorical power.

Through a systematic and in-depth exploration of the appearance of these trends in a variety of claims-making activities across academia, traditional and social media, and social policy, Frawley argues that the ‘age of emotion’ does not represent a step toward a more enlightened and emotionally aware society. Rather, it signifies a preoccupation with emotional deficits and a firm belief that emotional disorientation ultimately underlies nearly every social ill. Emerging from the analysis is the conclusion that emotions have become key signifiers of broader cultural tendencies to affirm conservatism over progress, vulnerability over resilience, and the determined self over the free willing subject.

Argues that society’s current concern with emotions is not a sign of a more enlightened and emotionally aware society, but rather signals a preoccupation with emotional deficit and vulnerability.

Argues that emotions have become key signifiers of broader cultural tendencies to affirm conservatism over progress, vulnerability over resilience, and the determined self over the free willing subject
It examines emotions not as philosophical ideals or physiological processes, but as language and rhetoric. Emotions are viewed not as windows into the human mind, but as mirrors of broader cultural trends
Critically questions whether the current emphasis upon emotional intelligence and awareness is really as progressive as it might seem
It clarifies emotions as cultural constructions by situating them within an historical and cultural context and offers insight into what the contemporary semiotics of emotion accomplishes

List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Context, Process, Rhetoric
1. Emotional Turns
2: Emotion After the Death of the Subject
3. An Open Subject?
4. Waves of Emotion
Part II: Case Studies
5. Mind(fulness) of the Gap
6. Mindfulness from Adoption to Exhaustion
7. A Prehistory of Mental Health in Higher Education
8. The Discovery of a Problem
9. Adopting, Expanding, but not Exhausting
Conclusion
Methods Appendix
References
Index

This book offers an insightful account of the historical development of the wellness industry and the creation of vulnerable subjectivities in contemporary societies. It will appeal to many readers curious to learn more about the complex structuring of emotions and the self in the modern era.

  • Title: Significant Emotions: Rhetoric and Social Problems in a Vulnerable Age
  • Author: Ashley Frawley
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Print Publication Date: 2023
  • Logos Release Date: 2024
  • Pages: 248
  • Language: English
  • Resources: 1
  • Format: Digital › Ebook
  • ISBNs: 9781350026827, 9781350026797, 1350026794, 1350026824
  • Resource ID: LLS:9781350026827
  • Resource Type: Monograph
  • Metadata Last Updated: 2025-04-22T10:07:28Z

Ashley Frawley is Visiting Researcher in the Centre for Parenting Culture Studies at the University of Kent, UK and Visiting Research Fellow at MCC Brussels, Belgium.

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    $24.25