Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace

Since the time between the world wars, the language of emotions has been dominated by the discourse of therapy, starting a style of emotional expression and practice. Somewhat paradoxically, at the same time as a new professional group emerged with authority to pronounce on all matters emotional as...

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Main Author: Janasik-Honkela Nina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-01-01
Series:Open Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/culture.2017.1.issue-1/culture-2017-0052/culture-2017-0052.xml?format=INT
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spelling doaj-af78e8330fc8461f831eae5e585813682020-11-25T00:58:15ZengDe GruyterOpen Cultural Studies2451-34742018-01-011154955810.1515/culture-2017-0052culture-2017-0052Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the WorkplaceJanasik-Honkela Nina0Consumer Society Research Centre, Department of Political and Economic Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, FinlandSince the time between the world wars, the language of emotions has been dominated by the discourse of therapy, starting a style of emotional expression and practice. Somewhat paradoxically, at the same time as a new professional group emerged with authority to pronounce on all matters emotional as part of the unfolding of modern emotional capitalism, the categories of psychic suffering have witnessed a veritable emptying out of emotions. Currently, the emphasis is placed, rather, on various kinds of lack of behaviour. For instance, “melancholy” as an existential category for strong and energy-intense reactions to all kinds of loss, has been squeezed into the clinical category of “depression,” literally meaning “pressing down.” Negative emotional states have, however, recently appeared in many self-tracking activities, including in the “datafication” of emotions in the form of the Finnish application Emotion Tracker. In this article, I ask whether this introduction of self-tracking into the context of health care and the workplace has written any differences into the current practices of emotional capitalism. My findings suggest that by placing itself in the opaque middle ground between professional psychology and ordinary life, Emotion Tracker creates a new space where the rich tapestry of melancholy is again allowed to figure.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/culture.2017.1.issue-1/culture-2017-0052/culture-2017-0052.xml?format=INTemotionscapitalismself-trackingdataficationmelancholy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Janasik-Honkela Nina
spellingShingle Janasik-Honkela Nina
Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
Open Cultural Studies
emotions
capitalism
self-tracking
datafication
melancholy
author_facet Janasik-Honkela Nina
author_sort Janasik-Honkela Nina
title Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
title_short Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
title_full Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
title_fullStr Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming Melancholy by Emotion Tracking? Datafication of Emotions in Health Care and at the Workplace
title_sort reclaiming melancholy by emotion tracking? datafication of emotions in health care and at the workplace
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Cultural Studies
issn 2451-3474
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Since the time between the world wars, the language of emotions has been dominated by the discourse of therapy, starting a style of emotional expression and practice. Somewhat paradoxically, at the same time as a new professional group emerged with authority to pronounce on all matters emotional as part of the unfolding of modern emotional capitalism, the categories of psychic suffering have witnessed a veritable emptying out of emotions. Currently, the emphasis is placed, rather, on various kinds of lack of behaviour. For instance, “melancholy” as an existential category for strong and energy-intense reactions to all kinds of loss, has been squeezed into the clinical category of “depression,” literally meaning “pressing down.” Negative emotional states have, however, recently appeared in many self-tracking activities, including in the “datafication” of emotions in the form of the Finnish application Emotion Tracker. In this article, I ask whether this introduction of self-tracking into the context of health care and the workplace has written any differences into the current practices of emotional capitalism. My findings suggest that by placing itself in the opaque middle ground between professional psychology and ordinary life, Emotion Tracker creates a new space where the rich tapestry of melancholy is again allowed to figure.
topic emotions
capitalism
self-tracking
datafication
melancholy
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/culture.2017.1.issue-1/culture-2017-0052/culture-2017-0052.xml?format=INT
work_keys_str_mv AT janasikhonkelanina reclaimingmelancholybyemotiontrackingdataficationofemotionsinhealthcareandattheworkplace
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