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Gender & Society
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The Impact of Emotional Opportunities on the Emotion Cultures of Feminist Organizations

Katja M. Guenther

University of California-Riverside

A fundamental debate within feminist scholarship and activism centers on what relationship feminism should have with the state. This article explores this debate empirically by examining differences in the emotion cultures of a state-dependent and an autonomous feminist organization in postsocialist eastern Germany. The comparative analysis demonstrates how organizations construct specific emotion cultures in response to emotional opportunities and constraints created by their relationships with state institutions. The state-dependent organization adopts a less expressive emotion culture that assures broad public appeal and future state support, but does not build critical consciousness among participants. In contrast, the autonomous organization encourages displays of feelings as part of consciousness raising, creating an emotion culture that reduces public appeal but produces especially loyal and active constituents.

Key Words: social movements • emotions • state • feminism

Gender & Society, Vol. 23, No. 3, 337-362 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0891243209335412


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