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  1. Learning racism in the absence of ‘race’.Stine H. Bang Svendsen - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):9-24.
    How do students learn about racism in the absence of ‘race’ as an explanatory concept for current social divisions? This article traces conceptual and affective negotiations of ‘race’ and racism in a Norwegian middle school classroom. Conceptual confusion about ‘race’, racism and lines of inclusion and exclusion in the nation is rife in this educational setting, where the curricular focus is on questions of immigration and integration. Treating ‘race’ as a ‘chameleon-like’ concept that adapts to the cultural context and political (...)
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  • Not Our Kind of Hate Crime.Gail Mason - 2001 - Law and Critique 12 (3):253-278.
    Implicit in hate crime is the premise that certain types of violence can be usefully articulated through the concept of hate. This article seeks to raise some questions about hate as a heuristic device for understanding homophobic violence. It sets the scene for this discussion by providing a brief overview of the ways in which the concept of hate has been introduced into Australian legislation. In many accounts of homophobic violence hate is reduced to a question of fear, to the (...)
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  • Psychoanalytic sociology and the interpretation of emotion.Simon Clarke - 2003 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 33 (2):145–163.
    In this paper I explore the sociological study of emotion, contrasting constructionist and psychoanalytic accounts of envy as an emotion. I seek not to contra each vis-à-vis the other but to establish some kind of synthesis in a psychoanalytic sociology of emotion. I argue that although the constructionist approach to emotion gives us valuable insights into the social and moral dimensions of human encounters, it is unable to address the level of emotional intensity found for example in murderous rage against (...)
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