Bibliographie complète
Creating emotional resonance: Interpersonal emotion work and motivational framing in a transgender community
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Schrock, Douglas (Auteur)
- Holden, Daphne (Auteur)
- Reid, Lori (Auteur)
Titre
Creating emotional resonance: Interpersonal emotion work and motivational framing in a transgender community
Résumé
In this article, we examine how interpersonal emotion work in a transgender support group and motivational framing of transgender social movement organizations together constructed favorable conditions for emotional resonance. We define emotional resonance as the emotional harmony and/or disjuncture between collective action frames and the emotional lives of potential recruits. Data derive from fieldwork, interviews, online e-mail lists and forums, community publications, activist speeches, and social movement organizations' recruitment appeals. Transgendered people joined support groups hoping to find relief from shame, fear, powerlessness, alienation, and inauthenticity. Although group members' emotion work partly accomplished such relief, it was hindered by identity conflicts and the temporal bounds of the meetings. Transgender activists and nascent social movement organizations, however, used motivational framing to promise targeted recruits a more permanent emotional resolution—one which could draw them into the movement. Our analysis moves transgender scholarship beyond issues of identity and moves framing theory beyond an almost exclusive concern with cognitive processes.
Publication
Social Problems
Volume
51
Numéro
1
Pages
61-81
Date
2004
Langue
Anglais
ISSN
0037-7791
Référence
Schrock, Douglas, Holden, Daphne et Reid, Lori. (2004). Creating emotional resonance: Interpersonal emotion work and motivational framing in a transgender community. Social Problems, 51(1), 61‑81. https://doi.org/10.1525/sp.2004.51.1.61
Régions géographiques
Thématiques
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