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More on happiness

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "Callard, Felicity" <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Monday, 13 December, 2010 12:20:09
Subject: [HIST-EMOTION] Conference: Affect, subjectivity and social 
order/disorder, Uni of Brighton, June 2011


In case of interest.  Please address inquiries to colleagues at University of 
Brighton and not to me! 
 
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The 4th Conference of the Psychosocial Studies Network  
CALL FOR PAPERS
 
To be hosted by the School of Applied Social Science, University of Brighton, 
June 10th-11th, 2011
 
Keynote papers will be given by:
Professor Valerie Hey (The University of Sussex) Notes Towards Decoding The 
Affective Economy of Austerity in Higher Education
 
Professor Lynn Froggett (University of Central Lancashire) Reparative 
conservatism: the fourth way?
 
Professor Julian Henriques (Goldsmiths College) Rhythms, vibrations and affect: 
a case study of the Jamaican Dance Hall Scene
 
Conference Rationale
Attention to the affective dimensions of social dynamics and social order has 
been a core characteristic of recent psychosocial research in a number of 
disciplines. This 'turn to affect' amongst critical scholars reflects a growing 
societal preoccupation with emotion, feeling, sentiment, passion and affection. 
Happiness, for example, is now a prominent policy concern and an established 
feature of 'human resources' management, whilst health systems are eager to take 
account of 'subjective wellbeing'. Educational and business practices alike are 
concerned with 'emotional intelligence' whilst lawyers consider 'emotional harm' 
as a factor in judicial decisions and advertisers specialise in 'emotional 
branding'.  Whether such social developments are grasped in relation to 
‘emotionalisation’, ‘psychologisation’,  ‘informalisation’, 
‘de-traditionalisation’ or some other theoretical orientation, it is clear that 
there is a need for modes of thought and research practice capable of grasping 
the manifold ways in which affectivity and sociality combine and interpenetrate. 
We thus invite submissions of individual papers, workshops, practical sessions 
and symposia that deal with this issue. Core themes might include:
 
·        Evaluating different theoretical approaches (e.g. psychoanalytical, 
constructivist, feminist, queer theory, systems theoretical, ANT)
·        Empirical studies of affect in specific fields such as social welfare, 
criminal justice, education, politics, media, management, human resources, 
health and medicine, consumption, violence and human rights.
·        Methodological issues in the social scientific study of affect and 
emotion.
·        Comparing the ways affect and emotion are approached in different 
social science disciplines (e.g. cultural studies, geography, social psychology, 
sociology, anthropology, history)
·        Explorations of the subjective embodied and experiential aspects of 
socially ordered affect.
These are merely suggestions, however, and all relevant proposals will be 
considered by the conference committee.
Please submit your proposal - by Feburary 15th 2011 - in the form of an abstract 
not exceeding 250 words as an email attachment to the following e-mail address: 
[log in to unmask]
Conference Fee:
£100 full conference plus conference dinner and entertainment
£50 concessionary rate for students
 
The PsychosocialStudies Network is a network of researchers, teachers, students 
and practitioners interested in the relationship between the psychic and the 
social. More information on the network can be found at 
http://psychosocial-studies-network.blogspot.com/.  The network is not 
exclusive, and we encourage paper proposals from all interested parties.
 
The conference is organized by the University of Brighton Psychosocial Research 
Group, details of which can be found at: 
http://www.brighton.ac.uk/sass/research/programmes/psysoc/index.php?PageId=90
 
Further details and conference booking forms can be found at 
http://www.brighton.ac.uk/sass/research/conferences/psn.php
 Affect, Subjectivity and Social Order/Disorder- 
 
 
 
-----
Dr Felicity Callard
Senior Research Fellow
NIHR Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health
South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust / Institute of Psychiatry, King's 
College London
 
Mailing address:
PO 34 Service User Research Enterprise
Health Service & Population Research
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London
De Crespigny Park
London SE5 8AF
(44) (0)207 848 5077
[log in to unmask]
 

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