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  1. Emotional impacts of environmental decline: What can Native cosmologies teach sociology about emotions and environmental justice?Kari Marie Norgaard & Ron Reed - 2017 - Theory and Society 46 (6):463-495.
    This article extends analyses of environmental influences on social action by examining the emotions experienced by Karuk Tribal members in the face of environmental decline. Using interviews, public testimonies, and survey data we make two claims, one specific, the other general. We find that, for Karuk people, the natural environment is part of the stage of social interactions and a central influence on emotional experiences, including individuals’ internalization of identity, social roles, and power structures, and their resistance to racism and (...)
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  • From “making toast” to “splitting apples”: dissecting “care” in the midst of chronic violence.Javier Auyero & Kristine Kilanski - 2015 - Theory and Society 44 (5):393-414.
    Scholarship has tended to focus on the deleterious impacts of chronic exposure to violence, to the detriment of understanding how residents living in dangerous contexts care for themselves and one another. Drawing on 30 months of ethnographic fieldwork, this article examines two sets of practices that residents exercise in the name of protecting themselves and their loved ones. The first set (“making toast”) includes the mundane, “small acts,”—often embedded in routine—that residents draw on in an effort to form connections and (...)
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