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Journal Article

Citation

Kenway J, Fahey J. Emotion Space Society 2011; 4(3): 187-194.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.emospa.2010.07.003

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Our purpose in this paper is to offer an historical and cultural account of the relationships between globalisation, the nation-state, emotion and the academic mobility policies that are driven by the knowledge economy. In so doing we seek to contribute to the emerging literature on the links between emotion, policy and globalisation. These links are under-researched and under-theorised. Seeking to build on Arjun Appadurai's work on the global cultural economy, we coin the term 'emoscapes'. Emoscapes, we argue, involve the movement and mobilisation of emotion on intersecting global, national and personal scales. This concept helps us to illuminate how emotion circulates within global power and knowledge geographies. We discuss global policy atmospherics in terms of the structural power relationship between different nation-states and regions, the feelings such relationships generate on matters of 'brain mobility' and the implications for policy. This provides a broad context for our discussion of the nation-state itself where we consider how the nation-state's position within these global power formations contributes to national feelings. Taking the example of Australia, we look at its emotional archive, the implications for the ways in which Australian policies have territorialised the global 'brain mobility' policy discourse and the nation-state policy atmospherics involved. Ultimately we show how emoscapes have entered and influenced policy and how they are part of global and national power and knowledge geographies.

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