Against Affect

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A01=Lisa Downing
academic affective
Affect theory
and Sexuality
Author_Lisa Downing
Category=JBSF11
Category=QDH
Category=QDHR
Category=QDTS
critical theory
cultural affective
Cultural Criticism &
emotion studies
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eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminist studies race theory
feminist theory
Gender
gender studies
governmentality
identity politics
liberalism
literary studies
media studies
modern critical theory
Philosophy
political science
political theory
race studies
rhetoric
sexual studies
sexual theory
sexuality studies
sociology
Theory
Women
women studies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496242303
  • Dimensions: 127 x 203mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Against Affect interrogates shibboleths of feeling and reason and their relationship with ideas of identity, gender, and freedom in the twenty-first century. Lisa Downing starts with the familiar premise that emotion has been historically gendered and racialized since the Enlightenment, with women, people of color, and other non-normative subjects associated with emotionality, and only white men with logic and reason. The "affective turn" in the academic humanities attempted to redress this injustice in the 1990s, and affect theory, ubiquitous today, revalorized precisely what was excluded from logos: the bodily, the emotive, and the experiential. But how effective has this strategy truly been in changing perceptions of marginalized forms of knowledge and subjectivity? Against Affect argues that the academic affective turn has prompted a broader cultural one, marked by increasing prioritization—and exploitation—of feeling over reason, issuing from both the political left and right.

Using a series of case studies, Against Affect explores how the deployment of a language of emotion in both the academic and cultural spheres constitutes a new normativity. In thinking against affect, Downing questions the efficacy and desirability of idealizing feeling and proposes instead the redistribution of reason.

Lisa Downing is Professor of French Discourses of Sexuality at the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. She is the author or editor of twenty books, including Selfish Women and After Foucault: Culture, Theory, and Criticism in the 21st Century. She is an editor of Paragraph: A Journal of Modern Critical Theory.

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