Shame and passion: The affective governing of young unemployed people

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Shame and passion : The affective governing of young unemployed people. / Pultz, Sabina.

In: Theory & Psychology, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2018, p. 358-381.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pultz, S 2018, 'Shame and passion: The affective governing of young unemployed people', Theory & Psychology, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 358-381. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354318759608

APA

Pultz, S. (2018). Shame and passion: The affective governing of young unemployed people. Theory & Psychology, 28(3), 358-381. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354318759608

Vancouver

Pultz S. Shame and passion: The affective governing of young unemployed people. Theory & Psychology. 2018;28(3):358-381. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354318759608

Author

Pultz, Sabina. / Shame and passion : The affective governing of young unemployed people. In: Theory & Psychology. 2018 ; Vol. 28, No. 3. pp. 358-381.

Bibtex

@article{60b9043a79514fd8900afcd7ef77f0c1,
title = "Shame and passion: The affective governing of young unemployed people",
abstract = "This study investigates how young, well-educated, unemployed people are governed and how they govern themselves through affective capacities, focusing here on shame and passion. The empirical material consists of field observations made at an unemployment fund and in-depth interviews with 33 young unemployed people in the Danish welfare state. Inspired by governmentality studies including recent contributions concerning affectivity, I analyse how affect, emotions, and feelings are pivotal instruments of governmentality. On the one hand, unemployed people are encouraged to cultivate a passion for their profession and display this passion in their quest for a job. On the other hand, they are encouraged to feel ashamed for receiving unearned money from the state. The study applies the theoretical framework from governmentality studies and combines it with concepts in Ahmed (2014) in order to unfold the affective sides of governing young unemployed people. The study contributes theoretically by developing Ahmed{\textquoteright}s idea of “sticky emotions” in an explicit psychological manner by identifying an embodied and a phenomenological dimension. It concludes that shame and passion influence unemployed people differently in relation to their subjective life courses as well as in relation to their social and societal circumstances and that people deal with the stickiness of unemployment shame in different ways. Some get rid of it by sticking it to other unemployed groups and some by dis-identifying with their formal status and instead conducting themselves as freelancers. The study begins to fill in the gap of how the more diffuse sides of governing can be made psychologically identifiable and in doing so it sheds light on the intimate relationship between politics and psychology.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, affectivity, freelancer, governmentality studies, passion, precarity, shame, unemployment",
author = "Sabina Pultz",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1177/0959354318759608",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "358--381",
journal = "Theory & Psychology",
issn = "0959-3543",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shame and passion

T2 - The affective governing of young unemployed people

AU - Pultz, Sabina

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This study investigates how young, well-educated, unemployed people are governed and how they govern themselves through affective capacities, focusing here on shame and passion. The empirical material consists of field observations made at an unemployment fund and in-depth interviews with 33 young unemployed people in the Danish welfare state. Inspired by governmentality studies including recent contributions concerning affectivity, I analyse how affect, emotions, and feelings are pivotal instruments of governmentality. On the one hand, unemployed people are encouraged to cultivate a passion for their profession and display this passion in their quest for a job. On the other hand, they are encouraged to feel ashamed for receiving unearned money from the state. The study applies the theoretical framework from governmentality studies and combines it with concepts in Ahmed (2014) in order to unfold the affective sides of governing young unemployed people. The study contributes theoretically by developing Ahmed’s idea of “sticky emotions” in an explicit psychological manner by identifying an embodied and a phenomenological dimension. It concludes that shame and passion influence unemployed people differently in relation to their subjective life courses as well as in relation to their social and societal circumstances and that people deal with the stickiness of unemployment shame in different ways. Some get rid of it by sticking it to other unemployed groups and some by dis-identifying with their formal status and instead conducting themselves as freelancers. The study begins to fill in the gap of how the more diffuse sides of governing can be made psychologically identifiable and in doing so it sheds light on the intimate relationship between politics and psychology.

AB - This study investigates how young, well-educated, unemployed people are governed and how they govern themselves through affective capacities, focusing here on shame and passion. The empirical material consists of field observations made at an unemployment fund and in-depth interviews with 33 young unemployed people in the Danish welfare state. Inspired by governmentality studies including recent contributions concerning affectivity, I analyse how affect, emotions, and feelings are pivotal instruments of governmentality. On the one hand, unemployed people are encouraged to cultivate a passion for their profession and display this passion in their quest for a job. On the other hand, they are encouraged to feel ashamed for receiving unearned money from the state. The study applies the theoretical framework from governmentality studies and combines it with concepts in Ahmed (2014) in order to unfold the affective sides of governing young unemployed people. The study contributes theoretically by developing Ahmed’s idea of “sticky emotions” in an explicit psychological manner by identifying an embodied and a phenomenological dimension. It concludes that shame and passion influence unemployed people differently in relation to their subjective life courses as well as in relation to their social and societal circumstances and that people deal with the stickiness of unemployment shame in different ways. Some get rid of it by sticking it to other unemployed groups and some by dis-identifying with their formal status and instead conducting themselves as freelancers. The study begins to fill in the gap of how the more diffuse sides of governing can be made psychologically identifiable and in doing so it sheds light on the intimate relationship between politics and psychology.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - affectivity

KW - freelancer

KW - governmentality studies

KW - passion

KW - precarity

KW - shame

KW - unemployment

U2 - 10.1177/0959354318759608

DO - 10.1177/0959354318759608

M3 - Journal article

VL - 28

SP - 358

EP - 381

JO - Theory & Psychology

JF - Theory & Psychology

SN - 0959-3543

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 222326222