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Die sozialen Grundlagen der Emotionsentstehung: Kognitive Strukturen und Prozesse

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Emotionen, Sozialstruktur und Moderne

Zusammenfassung

Theodore D. Kemper stellt bereits 1978 die Herausforderungen und Potenziale einer Soziologie der Emotionen dar. Dabei verdeutlicht er, in welcher Hinsicht sie anschlussfähig an die zu der Zeit vorherrschende psychologische Emotionsforschung sein kann und zudem durch die originär soziologische Perspektive das Verständnis von Emotionen deutlich erweitern kann. Eines seiner zentralen Anliegen ist die Entwicklung soziologischer Modelle der Entstehung von Emotionen, deren Nutzen er wie folgt beschreibt: »They can provide a conceptual model of the social settings that cue the specific appraisals and comparisons which, according to cognitive theorists, precede emotions.« (Kemper 1978a: 31) Wenige Jahre später greift er diesen Gedanken erneut auf, jedoch unter dem Eindruck einer Debatte zwischen sogenannten ›positivistischen‹ und ›sozialkonstruktivistischen‹ Ansätzen der Emotionssoziologie.

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von Scheve, C. (2012). Die sozialen Grundlagen der Emotionsentstehung: Kognitive Strukturen und Prozesse. In: Schnabel, A., Schützeichel, R. (eds) Emotionen, Sozialstruktur und Moderne. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-531-93443-3_6

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