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Journal Article

Citation

Burkitt I. Emotions and Society 2019; 1(1): 51-66.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019)

DOI

10.1332/263168919X15580836411841

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In this article I look at the emotional effects of alienation in modern capitalist societies. I begin by considering Marx's theory of alienation, focusing especially on the alienation between people and between them and the social institutions to which they should be connected. In this way, alienation is understood as a form of estrangement within social relations and I draw out the emotional implications of this, in terms of the relations between people and in the way people feel about their own self. This is enhanced through an understanding of emotions as relational phenomena, a position highly attuned to Marx's own mode of social analysis. I then illustrate and develop this understanding of alienation and emotion by drawing on the empirical examples of political relations and property relations in the UK, concluding with a discussion of what this tells us about alienation and emotion in contemporary capitalist societies.

Keywords: alienation; emotion; estrangement; politics; social relations


Language: en

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