Facing Fear: The History of an Emotion in Global Perspective
Facing Fear: The History of an Emotion in Global Perspective
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Abstract
Fear is ubiquitous but slippery. It has been defined as a purely biological reality, derided as an excuse for cowardice, attacked as a force for social control, and even denigrated as an unnatural condition that has no place in the disenchanted world of enlightened modernity. In these times of institutionalized insecurity and global terror, this book sheds light on the meaning, diversity, and dynamism of fear in multiple world-historical contexts, and demonstrates how fear universally binds us to particular presents but also to a broad spectrum of memories, stories, and states in the past. From the eighteenth-century Peruvian highlands and the California borderlands to the urban cityscapes of contemporary Russia and India, the book collectively explores the wide range of causes, experiences, and explanations of this protean emotion. It contributes to the thriving literature on the history of emotions and destabilizes narratives that have often understood fear in very specific linguistic, cultural, and geographical settings. Rather, by using a comparative, multidisciplinary framework, the book situates fear in more global terms, breaks new ground in the historical and cultural analysis of emotions, and sets out a new agenda for further research.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Fear and Its Opposites in the History of Emotions
Max Weiss
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1
Fear of the Thirty Years War
David Lederer
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2
Conceptions of Terror in the European Enlightenment
Ronald Schechter
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3
“When Fear Rather than Reason Dominates”: Priests behind the Lines in the Tupac Amaru Rebellion (1780–83)
Charles Walker
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4
Fear in Colonial California and within the Borderlands
Lisbeth Haas
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5
Weimar Cinema between Hypnosis and Enlightenment
Andreas Killen
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6
Italian Fascism’s Wartime Enemy and the Politics of Fear
Marla Stone
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7
The Persecuted Body: Evangelical Internationalism, Islam, and the Politics of Fear
Melani Mcalister
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8
Danger, Media, and the Urban Experience in Delhi
Ravi Sundaram
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9
Fear of the Past: Post-Soviet Culture and the Soviet Terror
Alexander Etkind
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10
White Hajjis: Dutch Islamophobias Past and Present
Michael Laffan
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End Matter
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