ABSTRACT

This volume offers a state-of-the-art study of the diverse methodological approaches and issues in the study of emotions in international relations research.

While interest in emotion and affect in IR has grown in recent years, there remains an absence of sustained engagement with questions of methodology and method. Although much of the field holds the ‘emotions turn’ as laudable, it is commonly seen as facing serious, even prohibitive, methodological challenges.

Using a common framework for making discussions of methodology and emotion mutually intelligible, this work seeks to address this lacuna and will be of interest to students and scholars of international relations, research methods and IR theory.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

Parsing the passions

part I|2 pages

Concepts

chapter 3|15 pages

Emotions and mindfulness in IR

Moving beyond ‘anti-humanism’

part II|2 pages

Macro approaches

chapter 5|18 pages

Communitarian emotions in IR

Constructing emotional worlds

chapter 6|16 pages

The spiraling effect

Emotional representations and international interactions

part III|2 pages

Micro approaches

chapter 8|19 pages

Encounters between affect and emotion:

Studying order and disorder in international politics

chapter 9|20 pages

Emotions in-and-out of equilibrium

Tracing the everyday defensiveness of identity

chapter 10|15 pages

Cause and effect

The methodology of experimentation

part IV|2 pages

Ethics

chapter 11|16 pages

Orienting the body

Affective methodology and embodiment

chapter 12|18 pages

Sexual affective empires

Racialized speculations and wagers in the affective IR turn

part V|2 pages

Conclusion

chapter 13|12 pages

The power of emotions, the emotions of politics

What do we need to know about emotions to make sense of world politics?