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  1. What exactly are emotions, and how can we understand them sociologically? Sociologist Peggy Thoits (1989) provides one definition; she argues that emotions have four components (figure 4.5). First, there has to be some kind of situational stimulus. As an example, someone could express something you dislike.

  2. Jul 11, 2023 · Some emotions are more valuable in a social group than others. Social stratification is based on the ability to experience and display the valued emotions: Definition: Collective emotions are common feelings by members of a social unit as a result of shared experiences

  3. Jun 11, 2015 · The emotions that human beings experience play a fundamental role in all social phenomena. As a result, sociology needs to incorporate the analysis of affective structures and emotional dynamics into its objects of study. The integration of feelings, affects, moods and emotional states into sociological research, which began four decades ago ...

    • Eduardo Bericat
    • 2016
  4. Aug 30, 2016 · Developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the sociology of emotion draws attention to the ways in which emotions—phenomena that have historically been viewed as inherently personal—are socially patterned.

  5. We find convergent evidence that emotional expressions influence observers’ affective reactions, inferential processes, and behaviors across various domains, including close relationships, group decision making, customer service, negotiation, and leadership.

  6. Definition. The sociological study of emotions examines the expression and experience of emotions in everyday life. Areas of study include, in part, social interaction and emotions, identity and emotions, the cross-cultural study of emotions, and emotions and deviance.

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  8. Over the past three decades, five general theoretical approaches to understanding the dynamics of human emotions have emerged in sociology: dramaturgical theories, symbolic interactionist theories, interaction ritual theories, power and status theories, and exchange theories.

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