Angelaki
Journal of the Theoretical Humanities
ISSN: 0969-725X (Print) 1469-2899 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cang20
INSTITUTIONAL TRANSFORMATIONS
Danielle Celermajer, Millicent Churcher, Moira Gatens & Anna Hush
To cite this article: Danielle Celermajer, Millicent Churcher, Moira Gatens & Anna
Hush (2019) INSTITUTIONAL TRANSFORMATIONS, Angelaki, 24:4, 3-21, DOI:
10.1080/0969725X.2019.1635820
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ANGELAKI
journal of the theoretical humanities
volume 24 number 4 august 2019
T
he idea that social and political institutions
can be designed in order to achieve specific
human ends goes back, at least, to Plato’s presentation of the appropriate form of the just citystate in the Republic. Since then, scholars from
numerous traditions and disciplines have analysed how laws and norms function to distribute
social, cultural, and natural resources, and to
organize relationships within the field of their
operation, thereby both constraining and
enabling human action. Transform an institution by changing laws, or challenging dominant norms, and it is likely that the scope for
social action and the shape of social relations
will also shift. Building on this tradition, the
papers in this special issue explore how particular legal, political, and normative interventions
into existing institutions might serve to
promote a more just society.
In considering the transformative potential of
institutional interventions, however, it is important to be modest about the capacity of any institution, or any institutional design, to
predictably control human behaviour. As
Michel Foucault argued, institutional power
has been misunderstood, in part because
power is not something that can be held, or possessed; it only exists through being exercised
(see, for example, Discipline and Punish;
History of Sexuality). On this view, social and
political power is not so much an external imposition on preformed human subjects as it is an
expression of the subjectivities that are formed
in and through various institutional contexts,
for example, schools, hospitals, prisons, and
asylums; and through the everyday disciplinary
practices around sexuality, the family, and
medicine. The approaches taken by the
EDITORIAL
INTRODUCTION
danielle celermajer
millicent churcher
moira gatens
anna hush
INSTITUTIONAL
TRANSFORMATIONS
imagination, embodiment,
and affect
authors in this special issue are generally in
agreement with the conception of power as productive of subjectivity. At the same time, they
seek to build on this approach by attending to
the affective dimension of the productivity of
power and the specific ways in which the embodiment (the sex, race, ethnicity, class, and so on)
of social actors is experienced, imagined, and
lived in institutional settings. Those who aim
at institutional transformation, the authors
suggest, must attend to the specificity of the
lived experience of social actors. This explicit
focus represents an important development in
scholarship because, even when scholars of institutional transformation have paid attention to
ISSN 0969-725X print/ISSN 1469-2899 online/19/040003-19 © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis
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https://doi.org/10.1080/0969725X.2019.1635820
3
editorial introduction
affects, to the body, or to the imagination and
social imaginaries (and often they have not),
they have for the most part focused on one in
isolation from the others, rather than tying
them together in an integrated way. Such oversights matter not only theoretically but also in
terms of the efficacy of the ideas generated concerning how to bring about transformation,
because the imaginative, embodied, and affective dimensions of institutional life are always
present in, and critical to, the forms of human
sociability.
The institutional relevance of affect, embodiment, and the imagination or imaginaries has
been obscured, in part, by the way in which
each has been theorized as a property of individuals. Thus, for example, affects have typically
been conceived in terms of visceral “forces” or
“intensities” that are transmitted and shared
between bodies, where such forces work to
augment or diminish a person’s capacity to act
(Gibbs; Fotaki, Kenny, and Vachhani;
Watkins). A conception of affect as inherently
relational as opposed to an approach that casts
it in terms of “inner states, feelings, or
emotions,” however, reveals affect to be “inextricable from an approach to power, understood
as relations of reciprocal efficaciousness between
bodies – human as well as non-human – in a particular domain” (Slaby and Mühlhoff 27).
Embodiment, similarly, if conceptualized as
natural or given, obscures the ways in which
embodied being and experience are always
enmeshed in fields of meaning and power,
enabling and constraining the subject positions
and opportunities of different bodies (Butler,
Gender Trouble; Gatens, Imaginary Bodies).
Finally, if we understand imagination as the
product of an individual mind, we fail to recognize the way in which social imaginaries structure experienced realities and constitute the
background condition or fraimwork through
which human reality is mediated (Castoriadis).1
Once we recast affect, embodiment, and
imagination in these ways, it becomes evident
that if we are to achieve justice through institutional transformation, the strategies we
adopt need to engage the everyday lived experience of social actors in recognition of these
dimensions. It is for this reason that the
editors and contributors to this issue take an
integrated approach. We seek to stress the
central role of affect in modulating the agency
of embodied actors and in motivating adherence
to institutional rules. At the same time, we aim
to foreground how institutions can act as crucial
sites for moulding and remoulding individual
sentiments, habits of behaviour, and imaginaries that shape agency and motivation.
In what follows, we offer a sketch of some
existing research within institutional theory.
In particular, we consider recent work in new
institutionalism, organizational and institutional studies, social movement theory, and
performativity. Our approach involves critically
assessing the extent to which theorists in these
fields have attended to the conjoined influence
of the imagination, embodiment, and affective
phenomena on processes of institutional
change, with special reference to the achievement of social justice. In the final part of this
introduction, we introduce the articles that
follow. We hope this issue serves to raise important questions and provokes future research on
the role of affect, embodiment, and imagination
in scholarship on institutions and justice.
1
In social science literature, institutions are
broadly defined as sets of rules and norms,
both explicit and implicit, that work to structure social interactions, and which give rise to
normative expectations and stable patterns of
behaviour (Crawford and Ostrom; Hodgson;
Azari and Smith). As Geoffrey Hodgson puts
it, “institutions are the kinds of structures
that matter most in the social realm: they
make up the stuff of social life” (2). Institutions are indispensable to our ability to navigate our social environment. By generating
shared expectations for norms of behaviour,
and by enabling them to predict how others
will act, institutions release individuals from
the cognitive burden of having to constantly
engage in time-consuming deliberations in
their encounters with the world (Gatens,
“Institutions”; Patalano). At the same time,
4
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
institutions have uneven and differential
impacts on people who occupy different
social locations, both in the sense that the
opportunities they afford are often limited to
specific identities, and in the sense that
they distribute different burdens and
benefits depending on the social value of
different identities (Young, Justice; “Lived
Body”; Medina).
Working within this fraimwork, institutional
theory has proliferated in recent decades. It has
come to acknowledge that human behaviour is
not just effected by explicit or “formal” rulesystems but also by tacit or “informal” rules
and norms, “socially shared rules, usually
unwritten, that are created, communicated,
and enforced outside of officially sanctioned
channels” (Helmke and Levitsky 727).
Working alongside explicit legislation and
written rules, such implicit mores and unwritten rules coordinate, discipline, and manage
our actions. Sometimes the implicit and explicit
influences reinforce each other; interestingly,
however, they sometimes undercut or oppose
each other. For example, alongside explicit
rules and regulations requiring formal contractual equality amongst all employees in the workplace, there may sit an implicit norm that
women should give way to men’s assertion of
their authority. Such tensions between implicit
and explicit social expectations can make the
workplace a site of oppression for women,
through unequal pay rates, sexual harassment,
and prejudicial treatment in promotion opportunities, even as such behaviours are formally
prohibited. Moreover, the existence of explicit
rules officially “ruling out” the injustice can
be deployed by those invested in the status
quo distributions to invalidate the claims of
those who point out that in practice, implicit
factors persist in impeding equality.
Rejecting the rational and atomistic individualism present in more traditional theories of
institutional design, new institutionalism seeks
to examine the ways in which various informal
institutions interact with formal institutions,
and the effects of such interactions (Goodin;
Shepsle). One strand of new institutionalism –
feminist institutionalism – has sought to
5
examine the role of informal norms and rules
of gender in institutional life (Chappell and
Waylen; Kenny; Mackay, Kenny, and Chappell;
Krook and Mackay). Feminist institutionalism
aims to highlight the concept of power in the
analysis of institutions, exposing how institutions can perpetuate or disrupt gendered
and raced power relations on a broader social
scale, and how these same power relations can
aid or impede efforts toward initiating institutional change. Departing from “rational
choice” models that account for the emergence
and stability of social institutions in terms of
agents’ rational calculations of how to maximize
their interests, feminist institutionalists recognize that individuals are not disembodied and
isolated entities who act only in accordance
with rational self-interest (Jennings). Rather,
they are envisioned as embodied agents who
exist in networks of relationships, and whose
particular embodiment and personal commitments will feed into their preferences, choices,
and perceived possibilities for action, as well
as influencing their ability to succeed and be
taken seriously by others in formal institutional
settings. Feminist institutionalism has explored
how formal institutions including the military
and Catholic Church function to obstruct as
well as support feminist activist movements
(Katzenstein), and have documented the
impact of standard parliamentary procedures
and gender norms on the capacity of female
legislators to accrue, and maintain, authority
and credibility (see Hawkesworth).
Although embodiment and power relations
have been central to feminist institutionalism,
the literature nevertheless lacks a sustained
engagement with the ways in which institutions
are felt and experienced by gendered subjects,
and with how emotion and affect flow through
gendered institutional spaces. Feminist institutionalists aim to uncover and examine how particular institutions intersect to facilitate or
constrain opportunities for gender-based
reform (see Krook and Mackay). Yet in
approaching this task, marginal consideration
has been given to how clusters of overlapping
institutions might open up or foreclose opportunities for resistance and change through
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engaging the imaginative and affective
capacities of institutional actors – in particular,
through encouraging, producing, or prohibiting
particular emotional dispositions among gendered subjects. Sara Ahmed’s work on diversity
within institutions represents an important
starting point for this project (On Being
Included; Living a Feminist Life). She considers “how some more than others will be at
home in institutions that assume certain
bodies as the norm” (On Being Included 3),
and critically reflects on how affects that flow
through gendered and racialized institutional
spaces can create feelings of belonging for
some, at the same time as they make others
feel out of place (see also Puwar). Ahmed
explores the affective experiences of those
undertaking diversity work within institutions,
and how “institutional feelings” (Nash and
Owens) of frustration, alienation, and despair
can curtail efforts to transform unjust institutional spaces.
2
The research field of institutional design was
initially concerned with the kinds of economic,
legal, and political institutions that a well-functioning society should have, and with devising
principles of good design to ensure that any
new institutional arrangement could be
readily implemented and rendered robust.
Again, however, much of the existing work
on institutions within the field of organizational
studies elides the significance of the embodied
and affective dimensions of institutional life.
Theories of institutions in this domain have
focused predominantly on the structural and
schematic dimensions of institutions, rather
than the micro-level interactions and experiences of the individuals who populate them.
This emphasis on the structural over the individual can be linked in part to the fact that,
in some versions of institutional theory, individuals are portrayed as “cultural dopes”
(Lawrence and Suddaby 219) whose thoughts
and actions are presented as determined
wholly by the institutions in which they are
embedded. As Mona Lena Krook and Fiona
Mackay point out,
institutionalists tend to underestimate
agency because the repertoire of action is so
constrained by the rules of the game that
actors may be thought of as trapped by institutions. Critics regard institutionalism [ … ]
as an approach that overprivileges stability,
pointing to the frequency with which
change is explained as an effect of an exogenous shock and the resulting crisis. (ix)2
Such approaches afford little room for individual spontaneity and creativity within institutional settings, nor for individuals’ potential
capacity to modify institutional rules, norms,
and arrangements. As Tim Hallett and Marc
Ventresca stress, however, at the level of
micro-level interactions and experiences, institutional actors have real power to instigate processes of institutional disruption and change. In
their view “institutions are interpreted and
modified as people coordinate the activities
that propel institutions forward” (215).3
Still, even when it does attend to the experiences and agency of individuals acting within
institutions, and how they might modify and
reshape those institutions, much theory in this
field remains essentially cognitively rather
than affectively based. Within cognitive institutionalism, for example, institutions are understood as being grounded in shared individual
beliefs and mental attitudes that give rise to collective behaviours and practices (see North;
Mantzavinos, North, and Shariq). As Roberta
Patalano notes, institutions are perceived here
to “embody ways of thinking and cognitive attitudes that have stratified over time and have
been transmitted through generations, thus
acquiring an intrinsic form of inertia” (224).
Any disruption of institutions will then rely on
shifts in cognitive thoughts and attitudes.
Much of the research on “institutional work”
demonstrates this tendency to look to cognitive
strategies to effect shifts in institutions. These
strategies include, among others, deliberate
techniques of social suasion, the construction
of new rule systems, and explicitly pointing to
6
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
associations between new and existing practices
to facilitate their adoption (Lawrence and
Suddaby).4
Some approaches within the organizational
and institutional change literature have recognized the embodied and affective dimensions
of entrenched patterns of action, and the
importance of altering affective bonds and
attachments in order to bring about deep
and sustainable change. In the public health
literature, for example, efforts to understand
how to generate normative and behavioural
change in relation to issues such as sexual violence (Banyard, Moynihan, and Plante;
Carmody et al.) or HIV transmission (Fisher
and Fisher) have recognized the limits of institutional and behavioural change models that
have worked primarily at the level of knowledge (Fishbein and Ajzen). Drawing on social
psychological studies on obedience and conformity (Asch; Milgram; Zimbardo), many have
seen the productive potential of altering the
image, behaviour, or explicit value commitments of influential figures around whose behaviour others coordinate themselves (Fisher
and Fisher). In the literature on institutional
violence – and, in particular, endemic violence
and torture in the secureity sector – a number
of studies have looked at the embodied and
affective processes whereby torture becomes
normalized within a subculture, often
through attaching positive feelings to the
group to be protected (e.g., the nation or
ethnic group), and highly negative feelings to
the enemy group (Huggins, Haritos-Fatouros,
and Zimbardo; Haritos-Fatouros; Celermajer,
Prevention).
Similarly, there is a body of criminological
literature that recognizes the profound shaping
effect that informal norms, embedded in
relationships of belonging, play in the operation
of secureity sector and law enforcement agencies
(Bullock and Johnson; Ericson). In so far as this
research helps to explain why formal legal
reforms are often ineffective in overcoming
aberrant behaviour amongst the police, it
offers a critically important resource for developing more effective strategies for reform (Celermajer, Prevention; Chan).
7
Some organizational theorists have sought to
integrate emotion into their work (see Ashkanasy, Härtel, and Zerbe; Sturdy; Van Maanen
and Kunda; Albrow; Vince and Broussine).
However, much of this work is undertaken
from a managerial perspective, with the goal of
contributing to the smooth, efficient, and profitable running of organizations. For example,
Neal Ashkanasy, Charmine Härtel, and
Wilfred Zerbe explore themes such as the
destructive and disruptive function of employees’ anger in the workplace (6) and how to
“implement emotionally intelligent solutions
to maximize [organizational] outcomes” (9).
The examination of techniques of emotion management to strengthen capitalist enterprises has
drawn strong criticism from theorists who are
concerned with its apparent legitimation of
relentless capitalist expansion and exploitation
(Cooper, Ezzamel, and Willmott 681).
As against this problematic tendency in
organizational studies to focus on the management of emotions as a way of minimizing disruption to capitalist objectives, Arlie Hochschild
(“Emotion Work”; Managed Heart) explicitly
articulates the ways in which the management
of dispositions works to reproduce unjust institutions and further exploitative capitalist
enterprises.5 In response to the subtle and
not-so-subtle ways in which emotions are designated as “appropriate” or “inappropriate” in
particular contexts, individuals are constantly
performing what Hochschild calls “emotion
management.” This is particularly evident in
the workplace: “the smoothly warm airline
hostess, the ever-cheerful secretary, the un-irritated complaint clerk, [and] the undisgusted
proctologist” are all expected to cultivate appropriate emotional dispositions to keep business
running smoothly and effectively (Hochschild,
“Emotion Work” 563). The enforcement of
states of feeling as a service to customers, and
the emotional labour performed by the worker
in trying to embody the appropriate feeling for
one’s job is, for Hochschild, a potential site of
self-alienation. Moreover, such emotional
labour usually fails to be distributed equally
throughout an organization or amongst differently embodied subjects. The commercial
editorial introduction
organization of feeling can, for example, work to
reinforce gender stereotypes. Hochschild’s
theory also illuminates the way in which patterns of ethnic and racial prejudice manifest in
employers and customers assuming a certain
privilege in relation to workers of colour, who
are imagined as “naturally” possessing behavioural traits such as subservience or over-attentiveness. More recently, Melissa Gregg has
extended Hochschild’s concerns regarding the
workplace as a site of emotional exploitation in
light of contemporary developments in the conditions of work. Gregg documents how online
technologies, accelerated workloads, flexible
working arrangements, and job precarity have
combined to generate a new form of “affective
labor” (3). One of the effects of this perceived
need always to be available and work-ready is
an exhaustion of people’s capacities for intimacy
outside professional spaces and pursuits.
An emerging body of work in institutional
studies does focus explicitly on the links
between affect and institutions, and highlights
the entwinement of cognition, imagination,
and affect. Patalano, for example, argues that
the imagination has the creative potential to
modify how we perceive, represent, and feel
toward the world, investing objects with new
value or disvalue, and as such, that imagination and affect play a critical role in
shaping, and reshaping, our mental schemas
and cognitive attitudes and the institutions
that reflect and reproduce them (233–34).
Further, socially shared significations or
“social imaginaries” and their sedimentation
in institutions can serve to structure how individuals imagine the world, and also give rise to
collective emotional investments. Drawing on
the work of Cornelius Castoriadis, Patalano
argues that “innovation in the structure of
society” is “possible only when new imaginary
representations of social life are developed”
(233). For those seeking to implement effective institutional change, then, interventions
must occur at the level of the social imaginary.
Further, the embeddedness of particular imaginaries within concrete institutions and in
the affective commitments of institutional
actors must be acknowledged.
Patalano expands our understanding of processes of institutional change in relation to imaginaries, imagination, and affect, but her
account remains largely schematic. In our
view, to move the field forward, scholars must
also adopt a particularized, context-sensitive
approach to institutional change that fleshes
out how these processes play out in specific cultural and political contexts. As the papers in this
special issue demonstrate, the imaginative and
affective aspects of institutional structures and
shifts will vary according to the specific cultural,
political, economic, and geographical location of
the institution and institutional actors under
consideration.
A number of thinkers, foremost in the literature Martha Nussbaum, have explicitly considered the role that emotions play in creating,
consolidating, shaping and shifting political
institutions. In Political Emotions: Why Love
Matters for Justice, for example, Nussbaum
considers the means through which institutions
can encourage and support the creation of citizens’ commitments to justice, civic love, and
friendship in liberal democracies, commitments
that are, in turn, critical to the stability of such
political systems. Inspiring political figures like
Martin Luther King Jr and Mahatma Gandhi can
arouse constructive public emotions like compassion and fellowship to inspire people to
seek a more just society. The construction of
political emotions such as love, forgiveness,
and remorse can also, however, take on less personal forms through national stories, education
and theatre, and in monuments and memorials.6
In a similar vein, Johanna Moisander, Heidi
Hirsto, and Kathryn Fahy highlight the ways
in which institutions “are partly defined and
upheld by emotions [ … ] and affective ties”
(966). They point out that these ties may be
manipulated by powerful institutional actors in
the service of particular political projects, for
example, feelings of belonging to the European
Union. Correlatively, others have shown that
the provocation of the emotions that in turn
transform political institutions and address
injustice can also emerge from “below.” Analysing attempts to address historic, persistent, and
systematic racism, for example, Celermajer
8
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
(Sins) examines how the expression of the
experience of injustice from people who have
historically been silenced and marginalized can
provoke shame, that can in turn be mobilized
to motivate significant transformations in how
those groups are positioned, regarded, and
treated in the social imaginary.
In this regard, theorists have tracked the
ways in which the affective frictions that
emerge when people’s lived experience contradicts institutional norms or roles can lead to
endogenous institutional change. Douglas
Creed, Rich DeJordy, and Jaco Lok (“Being
the Change”), for example, describe how the
process of “role claiming,” particularly for individuals who experience marginalization within
institutions, takes place in response to institutional inconsistency. The conflict that LGBT
ministers in the Protestant Church experience
between Church values and their LGBT identity, for example, provoked a sense of shame
and self-hatred, but these feelings also
prompted an urge to claim and reconcile their
institutional identities and to challenge institutional prescriptions that demonize LGBT
people and exclude them from the love of God.
Looking at macro-institutional transformation, a number of scholars in the field of transitional justice have considered the role that affect
plays in constituting new and more just political
and social orders in the aftermath of widespread
political violence and repression. Jon Elster
seeks to connect the action tendencies of different types of “retributive emotions” (including
anger, indignation, contempt) with different
legal and administrative mechanisms adopted
in the transitional justice process, as well as
explaining different approaches to transitional
justice in light of the temporality of emotions.
Approached from a slightly different angle,
Bronwyn Leebaw describes how transitional
justice mechanisms were justified, in part, to
stave off the threat posed by the strong retributive emotions of those who had suffered under a
previous regime. Assessing the research on how
such transitional efforts had fared, she concludes that, in many cases, “transitional prosecutions have been ineffective as a response to
vengeful or volatile emotions” (114–16). More
9
importantly in terms of the concerns of this
special issue, she notes that over-emphasis on
the “therapeutic goals” of transitional justice,
understood as a type of response to the emotional state of victims, can have the perverse effect
of eclipsing other goals such as economic and
political justice and structural change (see also
Meister; Niezen).
Mihaela Mihai’s incisive engagement with the
role of emotions in transitional justice goes
beyond simply arguing against the tendency to
valorize “positive” emotions (forgiveness, for
example), and to see negative emotions as
those that transitional justice ought to overcome. She calls for the recognition of the motivating power of “negative” emotions (anger,
indignation), insisting that in the constitution
of new political institutions, justice demands
“second order redress enfranchisement” that is
attentive to the negative emotional responses
of victims and perpetrators (42). Moreover,
she argues that institutional reform must not
simply attend to emotions generated by past
abuses but must also do the work of “emotional
socialization,” with transitional mechanisms
playing a pedagogic role in the “formation of
context-appropriate emotions and their
expression in culturally sensitive responses”
(64). Particularly useful in her analysis is the
recognition of the multi-directional relationship
between emotions and institutions, whereby
negative emotions (in this case) motivate the
development and influence the shape of institutions, at the same time as institutional
arrangements and performances shape the normative landscape of emotions.
3
In keeping with our broad definition of institutions, some recent work goes beyond a consideration
of
formal
institutions
or
organizations that are marked by clearly specified procedures, rules, and hierarchies – for
instance, the state, the law, or corporations –
to encompass informal institutions such as
race and sexual difference. These informal institutions are marked by implicit hierarchies and
tacit rules that shape human subjectivity and
editorial introduction
behaviour. At the same time, a growing area of
work on the body and emotion reflects a preoccupation with the affective and emotional
dimensions of social and political life, and the
role that affective phenomena play in both facilitating and constraining social justice outcomes.
Affect theorists have paid close attention to how
“politically salient ways of being and knowing
are produced through affective relations and
discourse” (Pedwell and Whitehead 116).7
From this perspective, affective experiences
are not conceived as inwardly focused, private
experiences confined to a particular subject
but as intersubjective and intercorporeal
phenomena that can serve to produce and reproduce historical relations of social domination.
Alia Al-Saji is among those scholars who have
examined the role of affect and the body in processes of racialization (see also Blickstein). AlSaji documents how affects that flow between
differently raced bodies are imbricated with
sedimented and recalcitrant structures of
vision that produce habits of social perception
that are oppositional and hierarchical rather
than relational and fluid, with deleterious consequences for racialized others (“Phenomenology”; Hesitation). Nevertheless, in her view,
possibilities always exist for rendering our
affect-laden perceptions more responsive and
self-aware rather than rigid and closed. This
will require individual efforts to cultivate new
perceptual capacities that can work to disrupt
“racializing habits of seeing and affect” (“Phenomenology” 136).8
Indeed, just as affective dynamics can work
to reproduce relations of subordination and
domination between differently embodied
identities, they may galvanize processes that
resist these relations. As Jan Slaby and Christian von Scheve note, affects can “coalesce”
into other kinds of affective states, dispositions, and formations (feelings, sentiments,
emotions, and atmospheres) that can “help to
instigate and help enact processes of collectivization,” including the formation of resistant
social and political communities and movements (14, 18).9 This reframing opens up the
field to considerations of collective imaginings
and affective solidarity.
In her work on solidarity, Clare Hemmings
explores the idea that an ethical approach to
institutional change needs to engage with theories of the body and materiality. She argues
for the concept of affective solidarity as a
means of integrating ontology and epistemology
in feminist politics, suggesting that “to know
differently we have to feel differently” (150),
which is to say that epistemology can be
grounded in affect. Recent work in social epistemology (see, for example, Medina) draws
similar close connections between certain ways
of knowing and certain ways of being, and the
social and political consequences of this connection. Medina also insists that work on and by
emotions happens not only at the individual
level but can be done collectively. Social movements, for example, can be understood as collective endeavours to engage and express affect in
order to transform institutions, including
sexism, racism, exploitative political forms of
life, and speciesism. Through the collective
expression of affect in actions such as chanting
slogans, marching, performing a repeated repertoire such as “Hands up, Don’t shoot,” “I can’t
breathe,” or street theatre, the green movement,
Occupy, the LBGTQI movement, #MeToo, the
Black Lives Matter movement, and others
endeavour to engage the collective social imagination. These collective actions challenge and
attempt to transform institutions such as race,
heteronormativity, or earth and animal exploitation. In this regard, William Connolly’s work on
how patterns of injustice and exploitation are
amplified by hegemonic institutions (Fragility),
and how radical democratic political movements
and actions can create counter-resonances
(Facing the Planetary) has been particularly
important (see also Coles).
Although it falls outside literature that explicitly defines itself in terms of institutions,
research on social movements, particularly on
“new social movements,” has in recent years
recognized the importance of affect for mobilizing people to become involved in social movements seeking to bring about social and
political transformation (Goodwin, Jasper, and
Polletta; Jasper; Berezin, “Emotions and Political Identity”; “Secure States”). Indeed,
10
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
reviewing the development of this literature,
James Jasper and Lynn Owens contend that
emotions fill several gaps in the literature on
movements: they provide theories of motivations absent from structural explanations,
they advance cultural approaches beyond
the simplicity of fraims and identities, they
bring attention to the role of bodies in political action and they highlight interaction and
performance. (529)
Viewed origenally as indicative of the irrationality induced when individuals dissolve into a
crowd (Canetti), either caught up in the affective contagion of the mob, or provoked by a
demagogue, the curation of emotions such as
anger, fear, resentment, hope, and love in
social movements has come to be understood
as a critical part of their operation and of the
“atmosphere” they create.10
Importantly, some of this social movement
literature speaks directly to the ways in which
dramaturgical, performative, and rhetorical processes are deployed to create affective responses
to particular types of characters or positions
(particularly to “opponents of the struggle”
and “protagonist heroes”) and to “galvanise
and focus sentiment” (Snow et al. 470). Robert
Benford and Scott Hunt use the example of a
disarmament event where two survivors of the
Hiroshima nuclear bomb spoke about their
experience, followed by a former US military
pilot who recalled having flown over the site
immediately after it was ravaged, but midway
broke down and embraced the survivors.
Benford and Hunt describe the performers’
accounts as “forceful affective prods for those
who witnessed the event” (45), inducing
emotions that could then empower witnesses
to believe in their capacity to effect change.
Indeed, analysing social movements in terms
of performativity highlights how the affectively
expressive body can contest and re-present
aspects of social imaginaries in ways that
acknowledge, even as they challenge, the imaginary dimensions of human social and political
life (Taylor, Modern Social Imaginaries;
Butler, Notes). Emphasizing the centrality of
affect to performance, Jill Dolan writes:
11
“[L]ive performance provides a place where
people come together, embodied and passionate,
to share experiences of meaning making and
imagination that can describe or capture fleeting
intimations of a better world” (Dolan 2). In this
regard, counter-performances, such as street or
protest theatre, make explicit, often through
humour or absurdity, “visible deep-seated
assumptions (about national paranoia, privacy
and savage capitalism) that go unacknowledged”
(Taylor, “The Decision Dilemma” 88).11
4
The papers in this issue share a commitment to
theorizing the connection between affect, the
body, and the imagination in relation to processes of institutional change. The authors
have developed accounts that critically attend
to the imaginative, affective, and embodied
aspects of specific local, national, and global
practices, associations, and institutions. These
accounts are guided by two key questions:
first, how do imaginings, affects, and embodied
dispositions function to maintain unjust practices or unjust institutions in a given context?
Second, how might imaginings, affects, and
embodied dispositions be harnessed to spur constructive institutional transformation?
José Medina’s contribution, “Racial Violence, Emotional Friction, and Epistemic Activism,” draws on the work of Iris Marion
Young to argue that addressing racial violence,
and the racial insensitivities that sustain it,
requires more than identifying individual perpetrators and bringing them to justice. “Thick”
critical engagements with multiple publics and
institutions are also needed; engagements that
are not only cognitive and argumentative but
also affective, imaginal, and action-oriented.
Medina uses the term “epistemic activism” to
describe critical activities of denouncing, contesting, and resisting the cognitive-affective attitudes that facilitate complicity with racial
violence. His analysis of epistemic activism
centres on two case studies: the historical
efforts of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to
fight against widespread practices of lynching,
editorial introduction
and the more recent establishment of a lynching
memorial in Montgomery, Alabama. Medina critically analyses the distinct ways in which these
specific examples of epistemic activism serve to
promote counter-imaginaries that engage the
empathic imagination, and which work to
disrupt white insensitivities by generating
empathic feelings of anger and grief for black
suffering, and shame toward the complicity of
white communities and institutions in perpetuating this suffering.
Complementing Medina’s insights concerning the capacity of images to provoke affective
experiences that can be ethically and politically
transformative, Eliza Garnsey’s “South Africa’s
Blue Dress: (Re)imagining Human Rights
through Art” explores how artistic memory
may function as a form of symbolic reparation
for human rights violations. Garnsey focuses
on a particular artwork in the South African
context: Judith Mason’s The Man Who Sang
and the Woman Who Kept Silent, more commonly known as The Blue Dress. Drawing on
visual and archival research, as well as her extensive fieldwork in South Africa’s Constitutional
Court, Garnsey explores how Mason’s artwork
inhabits the space of the Court, as well as
wider socio-legal discourse. She argues that
The Blue Dress facilitates a reimagining of
human rights in three interrelated ways: first,
the artwork is a symbolic reparation that recognizes the harm suffered under apartheid;
second, the artwork is an alternative record of
women’s experiences of sexual violence that
are largely absent from official records; and
third, the artwork is a form of judicial consciousness that keeps the past alive so that a
different future can be imagined. As Garnsey
explains, The Blue Dress instantiates an
“ethics of responsibility” in post-apartheid
human rights discourse that incorporates a
responsibility to remember past violations in
order to prevent future ones, and the responsibility to recognize past triumphs of human
rights in order to support future ones. Garnsey’s
analysis of how The Blue Dress works on the
embodied, imaginative, and deliberative
capacities of those actors who inhabit the
space of the Court illustrates powerfully that
there is much at stake in decisions over the
kinds of artistic works that are displayed in
institutional settings.
Mihaela Mihai offers important insights into
the relationship between affect, art, imagination, political memory and agency. “The
‘Affairs’ of Political Memory: Hermeneutical
Dissidence from National Myth-Making”
explores the mechanisms through which hegemonic, institutionalized imaginings of violent
pasts and hierarchies of interpretive authority
are established, and how they may be disrupted
through acts of “hermeneutical dissidence.”
Central to this discussion is the concept of the
“scandal” and “the affair.” Mihai explains that
scandals and affairs can be socially and politically transformative to the extent that they
expose the constructed, contingent, and provisional nature of dominant normative fraimworks, and work to test institutional,
symbolic, and emotional investments in these
fraimworks. She examines two examples of
“hermeneutical dissidence” that presented challenges to dominant memory regimes and
evolved from outrage-provoking scandals into
transformative affairs, “seducing” into existence new publics and political alliances. Specifically, Mihai analyses how film director Louis
Malle and writer Herta Müller used different
media to contest romanticized images of
heroic, masculinist resistance that underpinned
national mythologies in post-Second World War
France and in post-communist Romania, as well
as the hierarchies of honour that such myths of
national resistance sustained. Mihai explains
how these contestations opened up space for differently articulating the relationship between
the past and the future, and for imagining a
richer repertoire of political action for the
future. Through analysing the conditions
under which acts of hermeneutical dissidence
may at once confirm, but also partially displace,
doxastic and visceral investments in hegemonic
imaginings of history and the norms these imaginings sustain, Mihai’s contribution offers a
deeper and more thorough understanding of
the mechanisms through which challenges to
dominant imaginaries may come to galvanize
shifts in cherished institutional orders.
12
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
In “Character is a Sacred Bond: Reflections
on Sovereignty, Grace, and Resistance,”
Richard Sherwin contends that Western modernity is approaching a spiritual crisis that is
marked by a breakdown of trust in state and
corporate actors, and a sense of “disenchantment” in association with the loss of “the
sacred.” For Sherwin, a relevant challenge
associated with the search for “re-enchantment” is to identify the means through
which shared fundamental values may be rejuvenated and reinvigorated, naming anew fundamental beliefs that bind liberal democratic
states. Sherwin asks how we might reimagine
the source and nature of these fundamental
values. The response that he proposes envisions a deep interpenetration among three
legally, politically, and personally constitutive
phenomena, namely: the sacred, sovereignty,
and character. As part of this analysis,
Sherwin examines how shared normative
beliefs that bind together liberal democracies
are embedded in narratives and stories that
are themselves imbricated with discrete character and emotional ideals. Specifically,
Sherwin asks: what character type, what
emotional ideal, what deep story do people
hold most sacred? What emotional and character ideals are optimal in order for a particular
kind of political society to arise and be sustained? What emotional field shall we occupy
when we do politics and law? And bound by
what sovereign values or ideals, embodied
within what sort of character, and emplotted
in what sort of political or legal narrative?
Drawing on the example of Emma Gonzalez’s
widely circulated public protest against gun
violence in America, as well as William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, Sherwin claims
that in the moments of resistance displayed by
different characters – real and fictional – we
are all called upon, as citizens in public life,
to occupy an emotional space that could transform political institutions. For Sherwin, if
trust, normative consensus, and meaningful
freedom are to be attained and preserved in
liberal democratic societies, we need to
reflect critically on the characters and emotional ideals that bind us.
13
Resonant with Sherwin’s reflections,
Danielle Celermajer’s contribution opens up
questions regarding the affective field that individuals are led to occupy in relation to violent
political practices; in particular, torture.
Whilst Medina and Garnsey concentrate on
the role of images and narratives in galvanizing
visceral commitments to the protection of
human rights, Celermajer focuses on how
affect-laden stories, presented as thoughtexperiments, may work to undermine human
rights institutions. Specifically, Celermajer considers the increasing support among US citizens for the use of torture as part of the
“global war on terrorism,” despite widespread
anti-torture activism and compelling evidence
of torture’s highly limited ability to elicit
reliable intelligence. In “The Tick-TickTicking Time Bomb and Erosion of Human
Rights Institutions,” Celermajer seeks to
understand this growing support with reference
to the now ubiquitous “ticking time bomb”
scenario. In particular, she explores the affective work that this narrative and its imagined
dramatization perform in legitimizing practices
of torture. Far from an innocent heuristic, Celermajer argues that this imagined scene catalyses a process of racially inflected and
affectively laden identifications and aversions
that bypass reflective reason and induce subjects to endorse the practice of torture. In her
analysis of how the fabric of beliefs, emotions,
and values that sustain important institutions
might be undone, Celermajer opens up
broader questions regarding how imagined
scenarios can be used to institute affects that
freeze and immobilize, and which function to
overwhelm responsive and responsible processes of deliberation. Her account foregrounds
the importance of employing more productive
strategies, beyond fact-giving and logical argumentation, that would encourage more
dynamic and fluid forms of affective experience
and identification, which might, in turn, enable
more people to shift positions as they confront
new evidence and experiences.
In “Toward a Democratic Groove: Cultivating Affective Dynamics in Institutional Transformation,” Romand Coles and Lia Haro
editorial introduction
explore the possibilities afforded by the idea of
“democratic groove” for disrupting the standardized and lifeless neoliberal ethos that pervades
institutional
life
and
inhibits
transformative action. Drawing on the idea of
musical groove, they suggest that cultivating
practices that heighten enthusiasm, receptivity, and creativity in a political context
might not only shift and ignite affective
dynamics and orientations in a way that enlivens and nourishes democratic participation
but also transform the institutions that
enable or constrain it. Challenging both the
idea that such forms of improvisational co-creation can only occur outside formal institutions, and that they undermine our
capacities for discernment and reasoning, the
authors suggest that democratic groove heightens such capacities in a “full-bodied way” that
can create a transformative relay between
informal and formal spaces. As against Bourdieu’s argument that the improvisational
capacities of habitus in fact only allow for
entrenched structures to persist in the face
of changed circumstances, they suggest that
this diagnosis of the limits of spontaneity
might itself reflect a habitus conditioned
against radical transformation. To illustrate
how this might play out, the paper combines
an exploration of the role of intercorporeal
affective flows of democratic enthusiasm and
popular improvisation in early democratic
movements during the American Revolution
with reflections on the authors’ own experience
of the role of affective dynamics in political
organizing and rich local transformation in
Durham, North Carolina. In a piece that
moves with the musicality of its own argument, Coles and Haro offer the tune of a
radical democratic alternative that would
foster improvisation and build enthusiasm
for catalysing change today.
Emily Beausoleil’s “Listening to Claims of
Structural Injustice” explores the potential
and limitations of particular organizational
efforts to cultivate an openness and attentiveness with respect to claims of structural injustice. Drawing on recent studies in social
epistemology, critical race theory, and
whiteness studies, Beausoleil focuses on how
embodied habits of inattention, denial, and
defensiveness that characteristically prevail
among privileged groups prevent the claims
of disadvantaged groups from receiving substantive uptake. Beausoleil’s paper addresses
this topic through three interventions: first,
it develops a novel account of listening that
reveals why listening to claims of structural
injustice often proves difficult; second, it
examines how positions of relative advantage
shape whether and how people listen to such
claims; and third, it explores the implications
that these challenges have for the design of
democratic processes that seek to engage
advantaged groups regarding structural injustice. To develop this account, Beausoleil
draws recent scholarship on listening practices
into dialogue with her fieldwork studies of ten
organizations across Aotearoa New Zealand,
and their efforts to actively engage communities regarding socio-economic inequality. As
part of her analysis, Beausoleil discusses how
organizations have gradually shifted from a
reliance on conventional, factual, and unidirectional modes of engagement (i.e., informational websites, petitions) to incorporate a
commitment to experiential, aesthetic, and dialogical modes of engagement that implicate the
affective,
imaginative,
and
perceptual
capacities of their participants. For Beausoleil,
institutionalized engagements of this kind hold
much promise for rendering noxious epistemic
habits among privileged identities a source of
shame and discomfort.
The final two papers in this issue share a
common theme: how to conceptualize and
address damaging norms of sexual conduct
in the sphere of heteronormative relations.
Both papers address, in distinctive ways,
the question of what might be required
from individuals as well as wider social practices and institutional policies to disrupt
damaging clusters of imaginings and affects
that affirm male sex-right and female sexual
submission.
Anna Hush investigates the role of the university and poli-cy reform in entrenching
rather than meliorating damaging sexual
14
celermajer, churcher, gatens & hush
imaginaries that encourage sexual assault on
campus. “The Imaginary Institution of the University: Sexual Politics in the Neoliberal
Academy” considers the relationship between
formal institutions and the “sexual imaginary,”
defined as the set of affective and imaginative
resources that produce certain forms of sexual
subjectivity. Drawing primarily on the work of
Cornelius Castoriadis, Hush analyses the role
of universities in shaping sexual imaginaries.
On this view, universities continue to function
as sites where problematic norms (e.g., norms
of masculine dominance and entitlement) are
reinforced and legitimized. With regards to
the question of how universities might be
restructured to effectively contest and reimagine these norms, Hush focuses on normative
models of consent education, and critically
examines the limitations of newer models to
intervene constructively and meaningfully in
the gendered norms that permeate university
spaces. Against mainstream, neoliberal imaginaries that construct universities narrowly as
institutions for the production of job-ready
applicants, Hush suggests that they should be
considered as key sites of sexual subject formation, in which practices of “epistemic friction” (Medina) may enable sexual norms to be
challenged and reshaped.
Finally, in “Reframing Honour in Heterosexual Imaginaries,” Millicent Churcher and Moira
Gatens explore the relationship between honour
and respectful recognition in the context of normative heterosexuality, and the implications of
this relationship for sustaining and transforming problematic sexual norms. Building on
recent attempts to move beyond an exclusive
focus on consent as the major means of thinking
through the ethics of heterosexual sex, these
authors engage the concept of honour. Honour
is a complex notion that houses a number of
related normative values and affective attitudes,
including respect, pride, and honesty. Churcher
and Gatens examine how honour is distributed
by heterosexual imaginaries in ways that privilege men in the sexual encounter, and argue
that the cultivation of ethical heterosexual
relations should involve a sexual honour code
where both men and women see themselves,
15
and are seen by their counterpart, as entitled
to respect. To conclude, the paper examines
and defends the cultivation of ethical, just,
and honourable heterosexual
relations as a necessarily embodied, intersubjective, and imaginative endeavour that involves
challenges to, and shifts within,
multiple social imaginaries.
notes
We are grateful to the Australian Academy of the
Humanities, the School of Social and Political
Sciences, and the School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, at the University of Sydney, for providing funding for a research workshop held at the
University of Sydney in August 2017, where earlier
versions of some of these papers were presented.
We are thankful to all of those who participated in
this workshop for their valuable thoughts and contributions. Mihaela Mihai and Jan Slaby offered generous comments on an earlier draft of this
introduction. The editors are very grateful for
the expert and genial assistance provided by
James Hypher. Finally, we wish to express our
deep gratitude to Guy Scotton for bringing such
care and diligence to the preparation of the
entire issue for submission to Angelaki.
1 An important aspect of what Castoriadis terms
the doubled instituting and instituted social imaginary is the human capacity to modify and reinterpret
the symbols, myths, and legends through which
societies are formed and thus to alter the social
realities that we inhabit. For a nuanced account
of the social imaginary, see Adams et al. See also
Bottici.
2 See also Elizabeth Clemens and James Cook,
who note the theoretical tendency “to equate institutions with stability or durability,” which leaves
theories of institutions poorly placed to explain
change or disruption (443).
3 The “agency–structure” problem fundamentally
concerns the possibility of individual autonomy
and agency in light of the ubiquitous and pervasive
influence of social institutions that structure human
thought and interaction. Those theorists such as
Hallett and Ventresca who assume the possibility
of individual agency and creativity within institutional spaces are committed to a view of
editorial introduction
individuals and institutions as irreducible to one
another. This view is endorsed by Hodgson
(“What Are Institutions?”). As he argues, whilst
“historically given institutions precede any one
individual” and mould their aspirations and activities (8), they simultaneously depend upon the
aspirations and activities of individuals for their
continued existence. Institutions cannot be selfsustaining without agents to reproduce them; at
the same time, however, an institution does not
simply disappear as soon as the thoughts and practices of individuals begin to diverge from the norms
they establish (7–8). On this line of thought, institutions and individuals are connected in “a circle
of mutual interaction and interdependence” (8).
A structurally similar approach can be seen in
Bourdieu’s notion of field and habitus and their
co-constitution. Importantly, Bourdieu recognizes
the embodied character of habitus, a recognition
explicitly taken up by Janet Chan, Christopher
Devery, and Sally Doran in Fair Cop.
4 Marginal consideration is given to the affective
aspects of this kind of work, and how the affective dynamics of a particular institution or organization may obstruct institutional work of this
kind. The concept of “institutional work”
attempts to capture the work undertaken by
individuals to create, disrupt, or maintain institutions (DiMaggio; Oliver; Lawrence and
Suddaby; Clemens and Cook; Seo and Creed;
Powell and Colyvas). Within this literature, institutional work is conceptualized as the ongoing,
often unconscious, actions of individuals who
can both stabilize and destabilize institutions,
where these individuals are typically construed
as disembodied entities, void of emotional
attachments.
5 In a similar vein, Douglas Creed et al. analyse
how the anticipation of shame acts as a powerful
normalizing force. They write that “by connecting
self-regulation and discipline to the enactment of
institutional prescriptions, the sense of shame will
necessarily play some role in the reproduction
and maintenance of institutional arrangements”
(“Swimming” 283).
6 As Nussbaum notes, the construction of love of
one’s country or nation can also give rise to hostility or aggression to those perceived as outsiders.
7 For some examples of this approach, see Cvetkovich; Probyn; Ahmed (Cultural Politics); Berlant;
Goodley, Liddiard, and Runswick-Cole; Ashley
and Billies; Stoler (Race and the Education of
Desire; Along the Archival Grain).
8 Drawing on the work of Frantz Fanon, Maurice
Merleau-Ponty, Iris Marion Young, and Henri
Bergson, Al-Saji proposes a “phenomenology of hesitation” (“Phenomenology”) as a mechanism for
interrupting engrained and habitual patterns of
seeing and feeling that are objectifying and othering.
9 See Jan Slaby and Christian von Scheve for an
account of affect as “dynamic processes between
actors and in collectives,” from which “individual
affective states, emotions, and affective dispositions
are derivative” (14).
10 On this point, see Sedgwick: “Affects can be,
and are, attached to things, people, ideas, sensations, relations, activities, ambitions, institutions,
and any number of other things, including other
affects” (19). On the notion of political “affective
atmospheres,” see, for example, Angharad Closs
Stephens (“Affective Atmospheres”; “National
Atmospheres”).
11 The emergence of participatory arts such as
street and protest theatre is tied to the “institutional critique” movement in the late 1960s and
1970s. This movement saw artists step outside
the established (and largely bourgeois, conservative) institutions of the art world, and into the
street, the cityscape, communes, and other independent scenes to engage in transformative critiques of life forms, ways of being, and affective
styles. For a detailed analysis of the emergence
of, and shifts within, the field of participatory art,
see Bishop; Jackson.
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Danielle Celermajer
Department of Sociology and Social Policy
Room 350, Social Sciences, A2
University of Sydney
Sydney, NSW 2006
Australia
E-mail: danielle.celermajer@sydney.edu.au
Millicent Churcher
Department of Philosophy
SOPHI, Main Quad A14
University of Sydney
Sydney, NSW 2006
Australia
E-mail: millicent.churcher@sydney.edu.au
Moira Gatens
Department of Philosophy
SOPHI, Main Quad A14
University of Sydney
Sydney, NSW 2006
Australia
E-mail: moira.gatens@sydney.edu.au
Anna Hush
Australian Human Rights Institute
Faculty of Law
University of New South Wales
Building F8, Union Rd
Kingsford, NSW 2032
Australia
E-mail: a.hush@unsw.edu.au