Circulating emotions,beliefs and fantasies: The Middle East and the West1 |
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Authors: | Amal Treacher |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Sociology, University of Nottingham , amal.treacher@nottingham.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | Abstract Much ink has been spilt analysing racism, ethnicity and ‘otherness’. These analyses are frequently sophisticated, nuanced and committed to delivering improved ethical, emotional and political relationships. As we have witnessed recently, however, emotions, beliefs and fantasies remain stubborn. We are all diminished (no matter our history) by these troublesome psychic processes, entrenched beliefs and unthinking assumptions that pulse away unchecked. Feelings of fear and hatred sit alongside complex identifications and disavowal of self and other. This contemporary political and social context is loaded with discourses of a ‘clash of civilization’, the otherness of Muslims and Islam and a dominant view which asserts that Western societies have to be protected from potential explosions of terrorism and the corrosion of Western values. These discourses impact on citizens and erode the possibilities of inter-connectedness and a sense of shared communality. This paper is an exploration of a specific example of intransigence. |
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Keywords: | Emotions fantasies identification intransigence Middle East ‘West’ |
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