
Contents
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Nine The Social Structure of Moral Outrage in Recruitment to the U.S. Central America Peace Movement
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Emotion Management and Encouragement Mechanisms Emotion Management and Encouragement Mechanisms
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Intimate Social Networks Intimate Social Networks
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Mass Meetings Mass Meetings
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Identification with the Movement Identification with the Movement
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Shaming Shaming
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Guns Guns
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Divine Protection Divine Protection
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Endnotes Endnotes
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Sixteen Emotion Work in High-Risk Social Movements: Managing Fear in the U.S. and East German Civil Rights Movements
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Published:October 2001
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Abstract
This chapter examines the role of emotions in the U.S. civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, and in the East German civil rights or civic movement of the late 1980s. In the process, it hopes to uncover causal mechanisms that may matter for a wide range of social movements. More specifically, it examines the management of fear in these two “high-risk” movements, drawing upon the “emotion management” perspective of Arlie Hochschild (1983). Hochschild's key idea is that in their ongoing social interactions people more or less self-consciously “induce or suppress feeling in order to sustain the outward countenance that produces the proper state of mind in others”.
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