Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community

Emotions have been found to underpin the moral hierarchy of values and beliefs within and among groups by restraining undesirable attitudes and behavior. As such, emotions serve as potential indicators for analyzing whether or not certain norms are still deemed relevant. As Jon Mercer puts it: “One...

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Main Author: Simon Koschut
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2018-12-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1501
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spelling doaj-5d5317dd71844471b162165ea3425d262020-11-24T21:57:34ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632018-12-016412513410.17645/pag.v6i4.1501910Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security CommunitySimon Koschut0Otto Suhr Institute for Political Science, Freie Universität Berlin, GermanyEmotions have been found to underpin the moral hierarchy of values and beliefs within and among groups by restraining undesirable attitudes and behavior. As such, emotions serve as potential indicators for analyzing whether or not certain norms are still deemed relevant. As Jon Mercer puts it: “One way to test for the presence of norms is to look for emotion”. While the literature in International Relations (IR) generally accepts the emotional underpinnings of norms, there has been strikingly little elaboration of appropriate methods and criteria for studying the link between emotion and norms in IR. In this contribution, I suggest that socialization processes in a security community involve the internalization of appropriate rules of emotional expression or, in short, emotion norms. I propose that emotion norms can be historically traced via the emotional vocabulary and expressive rules derived from the production of texts. To do this, I searched for documents and treaties that serve as canonical texts for the collective self-conception and self-image of the transatlantic security community. As I hope to show, in these texts one can find substantial evidence of emotion norms, which designates these documents as ‘emotional landmarks’ that embody the emotional construction of the transatlantic emotional (security) community.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1501emotionsmethodologynormssecurity communitytransatlantic security community
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Koschut
spellingShingle Simon Koschut
Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
Politics and Governance
emotions
methodology
norms
security community
transatlantic security community
author_facet Simon Koschut
author_sort Simon Koschut
title Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
title_short Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
title_full Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
title_fullStr Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
title_full_unstemmed Appropriately Upset? A Methodological Framework for Tracing the Emotion Norms of the Transatlantic Security Community
title_sort appropriately upset? a methodological framework for tracing the emotion norms of the transatlantic security community
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Emotions have been found to underpin the moral hierarchy of values and beliefs within and among groups by restraining undesirable attitudes and behavior. As such, emotions serve as potential indicators for analyzing whether or not certain norms are still deemed relevant. As Jon Mercer puts it: “One way to test for the presence of norms is to look for emotion”. While the literature in International Relations (IR) generally accepts the emotional underpinnings of norms, there has been strikingly little elaboration of appropriate methods and criteria for studying the link between emotion and norms in IR. In this contribution, I suggest that socialization processes in a security community involve the internalization of appropriate rules of emotional expression or, in short, emotion norms. I propose that emotion norms can be historically traced via the emotional vocabulary and expressive rules derived from the production of texts. To do this, I searched for documents and treaties that serve as canonical texts for the collective self-conception and self-image of the transatlantic security community. As I hope to show, in these texts one can find substantial evidence of emotion norms, which designates these documents as ‘emotional landmarks’ that embody the emotional construction of the transatlantic emotional (security) community.
topic emotions
methodology
norms
security community
transatlantic security community
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1501
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