Lost in the Past: Emotions, History and International Relations

IF 0.3 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Relaciones Internacionales-Madrid Pub Date : 2022-06-28 DOI:10.15366/relacionesinternacionales2022.50.003
Simon Koschut, Rocío Pérez Ramiro
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In brief, the narrative is this: the history of the West is the history of increasing emotional restraint – a progressive historical development that moves from ‘primitive’ emotional cultures, which give people much more liberty to manifest emotions they experience, to ‘civilized’ modernity and the bureaucratic rational state, which require social control of emotions. I assess two different arguments for this conclusion.\nThe first argument concedes that at least some IR theories do take seriously the historical representation of emotions but holds that much of IR theorizing rests on a temporal binary that uses a linear-progressive conception of emotional history, in which the experience and expression of emotion increasingly became subject to emotional control by social forces. Certainly not all IR theories insist on the universal validity of specific models of emotion concepts, as I will show below. But even those IR theories that do take history seriously, cannot avoid incorporating the grand narrative of emotional restraint outlined above into their thinking.\nThe second argument holds that the grand narrative, which represents the history of international relations as a history of increasing emotional restraint, is predominantly a Western historical narrative. This argument introduces a spatial binary that rests on a spatial misrepresentation of emotional history in IR. This second binary constructs the history of international relations as a narrative of an increasingly rationalized Western world against an emotionalized non-Western world that remains stuck in its violent past. I suggest that this double binary – temporal and spatial – is deeply problematic because it is rooted in a questionable historical understanding of emotions in IR: it employs a linear understanding of emotions that underappreciates and misrepresents the emotional epistemologies of previous eras. The alternative that this study develops of a history of emotions in IR is to advance the argument that the history of international relations resembles a history of emotional communities.\nEmotional communities are “groups in which people adhere to the same norms of emotional expression and value – or devalue – the same or related emotions” (Rosenwein, 2006, p. 2). Precisely, the idea is to suggest non-linear ways to study emotions in IR as embedded in and expressed through various emotional communities in particular times and spaces. The most promising research strategy to develop such a cross-historical comparison of emotions is to historicize them. To historicize emotions means “subjecting discourses on emotion, subjectivity, and the self to scrutiny over time, looking at them in particular social locations and historical moments, and seeing whether and how they have changed” (Abu-Lughod and Lutz, 1990, p. 5).\nThis approach avoids some of the problems stemming from the double binary outlined above. First, it allows for a mapping of multiple emotional communities without introducing a particular temporal and spatial hierarchy. Second, the study of emotional communities enables us to evaluate contemporary notions of what is “emotional” in IR and if or how emotions have changed in their historical meaning and relative importance. Moreover, by historicizing emotions in this way, we can learn a lot about the moral values, power relationships and identities of various political communities of the past and present. Finally, to historicize emotions in this way lets us assess how different emotional communities interacted over time, contributing to a fuller understanding of globally entangled emotional histories. I illustrate this based on three interrelated approaches: communitarian, communicative, and comparative-connective. The analytical value of historicizing emotions through emotional communities is that it provides detailed insights into how emotions (or more precisely their meaningful expressions) change over time, how emotions are not merely the effects of historical circumstances but are actively shaping events and enriching historiographical theories in IR.\nFirst, this study contributes to the historical turn by further bridging the so-called ‘eternal divide’ between History and Political Science/International Relations (Lawson, 2010). Precisely, it problematizes the Eurocentric and presentist character of much of IR in a novel way by engaging in a critical dialogue with a linear process of emotional control. As many scholars have argued, the scholar’s choice of theorizing history becomes constitutive of the way IR is theorized and understood. My aim here is to sensitize IR scholars about how they include emotions in their work and to warn against how an unconscious and anachronistic treatment of emotions may distort our view of history in IR. A more nuanced inclusion of emotions may add to our understanding of the complex historical processes that underpin and have underpinned global politics. For example, there has been a renewed interest in the study of hierarchies in IR (Zarakol, 2017). As pointed out above, emotions are important, yet underappreciated, manifestations of such historically constructed international hierarchies. 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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to outline preliminary steps towards a history of emotions in IR. The primary contribution – and argument – of this study emerges from the observation that IR scholars have tended to write emotions ‘out of history’ in order to make sense of the present. Building on the works of historian Barbara Rosenwein, this study argues that much of the discipline of International Relations has incorporated into its thinking a strong but flawed ‘grand narrative’ of emotion. In brief, the narrative is this: the history of the West is the history of increasing emotional restraint – a progressive historical development that moves from ‘primitive’ emotional cultures, which give people much more liberty to manifest emotions they experience, to ‘civilized’ modernity and the bureaucratic rational state, which require social control of emotions. I assess two different arguments for this conclusion. The first argument concedes that at least some IR theories do take seriously the historical representation of emotions but holds that much of IR theorizing rests on a temporal binary that uses a linear-progressive conception of emotional history, in which the experience and expression of emotion increasingly became subject to emotional control by social forces. Certainly not all IR theories insist on the universal validity of specific models of emotion concepts, as I will show below. But even those IR theories that do take history seriously, cannot avoid incorporating the grand narrative of emotional restraint outlined above into their thinking. The second argument holds that the grand narrative, which represents the history of international relations as a history of increasing emotional restraint, is predominantly a Western historical narrative. This argument introduces a spatial binary that rests on a spatial misrepresentation of emotional history in IR. This second binary constructs the history of international relations as a narrative of an increasingly rationalized Western world against an emotionalized non-Western world that remains stuck in its violent past. I suggest that this double binary – temporal and spatial – is deeply problematic because it is rooted in a questionable historical understanding of emotions in IR: it employs a linear understanding of emotions that underappreciates and misrepresents the emotional epistemologies of previous eras. The alternative that this study develops of a history of emotions in IR is to advance the argument that the history of international relations resembles a history of emotional communities. Emotional communities are “groups in which people adhere to the same norms of emotional expression and value – or devalue – the same or related emotions” (Rosenwein, 2006, p. 2). Precisely, the idea is to suggest non-linear ways to study emotions in IR as embedded in and expressed through various emotional communities in particular times and spaces. The most promising research strategy to develop such a cross-historical comparison of emotions is to historicize them. To historicize emotions means “subjecting discourses on emotion, subjectivity, and the self to scrutiny over time, looking at them in particular social locations and historical moments, and seeing whether and how they have changed” (Abu-Lughod and Lutz, 1990, p. 5). This approach avoids some of the problems stemming from the double binary outlined above. First, it allows for a mapping of multiple emotional communities without introducing a particular temporal and spatial hierarchy. Second, the study of emotional communities enables us to evaluate contemporary notions of what is “emotional” in IR and if or how emotions have changed in their historical meaning and relative importance. Moreover, by historicizing emotions in this way, we can learn a lot about the moral values, power relationships and identities of various political communities of the past and present. Finally, to historicize emotions in this way lets us assess how different emotional communities interacted over time, contributing to a fuller understanding of globally entangled emotional histories. I illustrate this based on three interrelated approaches: communitarian, communicative, and comparative-connective. The analytical value of historicizing emotions through emotional communities is that it provides detailed insights into how emotions (or more precisely their meaningful expressions) change over time, how emotions are not merely the effects of historical circumstances but are actively shaping events and enriching historiographical theories in IR. First, this study contributes to the historical turn by further bridging the so-called ‘eternal divide’ between History and Political Science/International Relations (Lawson, 2010). Precisely, it problematizes the Eurocentric and presentist character of much of IR in a novel way by engaging in a critical dialogue with a linear process of emotional control. As many scholars have argued, the scholar’s choice of theorizing history becomes constitutive of the way IR is theorized and understood. My aim here is to sensitize IR scholars about how they include emotions in their work and to warn against how an unconscious and anachronistic treatment of emotions may distort our view of history in IR. A more nuanced inclusion of emotions may add to our understanding of the complex historical processes that underpin and have underpinned global politics. For example, there has been a renewed interest in the study of hierarchies in IR (Zarakol, 2017). As pointed out above, emotions are important, yet underappreciated, manifestations of such historically constructed international hierarchies. That said, it should be pointed out that the approach put forward here still represents only one way of ‘doing’ history in IR. It is not meant to diminish existing approaches or to simply replace an existing grand narrative with a new one. As Lawson and Hobson (2008) have rightly pointed out, “history comes in plural modes rather than in singular form” and this study welcomes such pluralism. Second, the study furthers the emotional turn by highlighting the historical dimension of researching emotions in world politics. Many IR scholars – with some important exceptions – study emotions in ahistorical ways through a universal psychologizing of international relations. Essentially, they suggest that today's emotions were the emotions of the past and will remain those of the future. But this viewpoint neglects the crucial fact that contemporary emotional categories and meanings are themselves the product of historical processes. While this has been increasingly recognized by some scholars (Hutchison, 2019; Linklater, 2014), it remains unclear what exactly is historical about emotions and how we should use history in their study. My point here is that before we can genuinely appreciate diversity or pluralism in and among emotional histories, we need to dispense with this grand narrative and its tendency to universalize emotion as regressive or atavistic tendencies. To this end, I suggest that the notion of emotional communities provides us with a novel historical perspective to open up space for a broader research agenda to analyze emotions in IR.
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迷失在过去:情感、历史与国际关系
本研究的目的是概述IR情绪史的初步步骤。这项研究的主要贡献和论点来自于观察,即国际关系学者倾向于将情感“脱离历史”,以便理解现在。以历史学家芭芭拉·罗森韦恩的著作为基础,本研究认为,国际关系的许多学科都将一种强烈但有缺陷的情感“宏大叙事”纳入其思维。简而言之,叙事是这样的:西方的历史是情感约束不断增强的历史——一种进步的历史发展,从“原始的”情感文化,它给人们更多的自由来表达他们所经历的情感,到“文明的”现代性和官僚理性国家,这需要对情感进行社会控制。我对这一结论进行了两种不同的论证。第一种观点承认,至少有一些情感关系理论确实认真对待了情感的历史表征,但认为大部分情感关系理论都建立在时间二元对立的基础上,这种二元对立使用了情感历史的线性递进概念,在这种概念中,情感的体验和表达越来越受到社会力量的情感控制。当然,并不是所有的情感关系理论都坚持特定情感概念模型的普遍有效性,我将在下面展示。但即使是那些认真对待历史的国际关系理论,也无法避免将上述情绪克制的宏大叙事纳入他们的思维。第二种观点认为,大叙事主要是西方的历史叙事,它将国际关系史表现为一种日益增强的情感克制史。这一论点引入了一种基于IR中情感历史的空间误读的空间二元。第二种二元结构将国际关系史构建为一种叙事,即一个日益理性化的西方世界与一个仍停留在暴力过去的情绪化的非西方世界的对抗。我认为这种双重二元——时间和空间——是非常有问题的,因为它植根于对IR中情感的一种可疑的历史理解:它对情感采用线性理解,低估和歪曲了以前时代的情感认识论。本研究在国际关系中发展情感史的另一种选择是推进国际关系史类似于情感社区史的论点。情感社区是“人们坚持相同的情感表达规范和重视或贬低相同或相关情感的群体”(Rosenwein, 2006, p. 2)。确切地说,这个想法是提出非线性的方法来研究IR中的情感,这些情感嵌入并通过特定时间和空间的各种情感社区来表达。发展这种跨历史情感比较的最有希望的研究策略是将它们历史化。将情感历史化意味着“随着时间的推移,对情感、主体性和自我的话语进行审视,在特定的社会地点和历史时刻观察它们,看看它们是否发生了变化,以及如何发生了变化”(阿布-卢格德和卢茨,1990年,第5页)。这种方法避免了上述二元理论所产生的一些问题。首先,它允许映射多个情感社区,而无需引入特定的时间和空间层次。其次,对情感社区的研究使我们能够评估IR中什么是“情感”的当代概念,以及情感在其历史意义和相对重要性方面是否或如何发生变化。此外,通过这种方式将情感历史化,我们可以学到很多关于过去和现在各种政治团体的道德价值观、权力关系和身份。最后,以这种方式将情感历史化,可以让我们评估不同的情感社区如何随着时间的推移而相互作用,有助于更全面地理解全球纠缠的情感历史。我用三种相互关联的方法来说明这一点:社群主义、交流主义和比较连接主义。通过情感社区将情感历史化的分析价值在于,它提供了关于情感(或更准确地说,它们的有意义的表达)如何随时间变化的详细见解,情感如何不仅仅是历史环境的影响,而是如何积极地塑造事件并丰富IR的史学理论。首先,这项研究通过进一步弥合历史与政治学/国际关系之间所谓的“永恒鸿沟”,为历史转向做出了贡献(Lawson, 2010)。准确地说,它通过与线性情感控制过程进行批判性对话,以一种新颖的方式,对大部分国际关系的欧洲中心主义和现代主义特征提出了问题。 正如许多学者所争论的那样,学者对历史理论化的选择构成了国际关系理论化和理解的方式。我在这里的目的是让IR学者意识到他们是如何在工作中包含情感的,并警告人们,对情感的无意识和不合时宜的处理可能会扭曲我们对IR历史的看法。更细致入微地将情绪纳入其中,可能会增进我们对复杂的历史进程的理解,这些历史进程是全球政治的基础,也一直是全球政治的基础。例如,人们对IR中的层次结构研究重新产生了兴趣(Zarakol, 2017)。如上所述,情感是这种历史建构的国际等级制度的重要表现,但未得到充分重视。也就是说,应该指出的是,这里提出的方法仍然只代表了在IR中“做”历史的一种方法。这并不意味着要减少现有的方法,也不是简单地用一种新的方式取代现有的宏大叙事。正如劳森和霍布森(Lawson and Hobson, 2008)正确指出的那样,“历史以多元模式而非单一形式出现”,而本研究欢迎这种多元主义。其次,通过强调世界政治中情感研究的历史维度,进一步深化了情感转向。许多国际关系学者——除了一些重要的例外——通过对国际关系的普遍心理化,以非历史的方式研究情感。从本质上讲,他们认为今天的情绪是过去的情绪,并将保留未来的情绪。但这种观点忽视了一个重要的事实,即当代的情感范畴和意义本身就是历史进程的产物。虽然一些学者越来越多地认识到这一点(Hutchison, 2019;Linklater, 2014),目前尚不清楚情感的历史究竟是什么,以及我们应该如何在他们的研究中使用历史。我的观点是,在我们真正欣赏情感历史中的多样性或多元性之前,我们需要摒弃这种宏大的叙事,以及它将情感普遍化的倾向,认为这是一种倒退或返祖的倾向。为此,我认为情感社区的概念为我们提供了一个新的历史视角,为更广泛的研究议程开辟了空间,以分析IR中的情感。
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来源期刊
Relaciones Internacionales-Madrid
Relaciones Internacionales-Madrid INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
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审稿时长
20 weeks
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