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  1. Being Dismissed: The Politics of Emotional Expression.Sue Campbell - 1994 - Hypatia 9 (3):46 - 65.
    My intent is to bring a key group of critical terms associated with the emotions-bitterness, sentimentality, and emotionality-to greater feminist attention. These terms are used to characterize emoters on the basis of how we express ourselves, and they characterize us in ways that we need no longer be taken seriously. I analyze the ways in which these terms of emotional dismissal can be put to powerful political use.
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  • Interpreting the Personal: Expression and the formation of Feelings.Sue Campbell - 1997 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Sue Campbell reinstates the personal as an important dimension in analytic philosophy of mind. She argues that the category of feelings has a unique role in psychological explanation: the expression of feelings is the attempt to communicate personal significance. To develop a model for affective meaning, the author moves attention away from the classic emotions to feelings that are more personal, inchoate, and idiosyncratic.
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  • Unnatural Emotions: Everyday Sentiments on a Micronesian Atoll and Their Challenge to Western Theory.Catherine A. Lutz - 1991 - Philosophy East and West 41 (1):119-120.
  • Emotions and Reasons: An Enquiry Into Emotional Justification.Patricia S. Greenspan - 1988 - New York: Routledge.
    In Emotions and Reasons, Patricia Greenspan offers an evaluative theory of emotion that assigns emotion a role of its own in the justification of action. She analyzes emotions as states of object-directed affect with evaluative propositional content possibly falling short of belief and held in mind by generalized comfort or discomfort.
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  • The Uses and Abuses of French Discourse Theories for Feminist Politics.Nancy Fraser - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (1):51-71.
  • Passionate Sociology.Ann Game & Andrew W. Metcalfe - 1996 - SAGE.
    Offering a major challenge to established textbooks and pointing to inspiring new ways of approaching sociology, this book presents a notable shift in introductory sociology. Too often the subject is taught as a dry and detached system of thought and practice. Passion is regarded as something to avoid or to treat with inherent suspicion. By asking questions about sociology and its relation to passion, the authors seek to revitalize the subject. The book introduces and develops a number of themes such (...)
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  • Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics.Hubert L. Dreyfus & Paul Rabinow - 1982 - Chicago: Routledge. Edited by Paul Rabinow & Michel Foucault.
    This book is the first to provide a sustained, coherent analysis of Foucault's work as a whole. To demonstrate the sense in which Foucault's work is beyond structuralism and hermeneutics, the authors unfold a careful, analytical exposition of his oeuvre. They argue that during the of Foucault's work became a sustained and largely successful effort to develop a new method - "interpretative analytics" - capable of explaining both the logic of structuralism's claim to be an objective science and the apparent (...)
     
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  • Nietzsche, Genealogy, History.Michel Foucault - 1978 - In John Richardson & Brian Leiter (eds.), Nietzsche. Oxford University Press. pp. (139-164).
  • Outline of a Theory of Practice.Pierre Bourdieu - 1972 - Human Studies 4 (3):273-278.
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  • Feeling Power: Emotions and Education.Megan Boler - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (1):205-209.
  • Valuing Emotions.Michael Stocker & Elizabeth Hegeman - 1996 - Mind 110 (439):860-864.
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  • Valuing Emotions.Michael Stocker & Elizabeth Hegeman - 1996 - Philosophy 73 (284):308-311.
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  • The Realities of Teachers' Work: Never a Dull Moment.Sandra Acker - 1999 - British Journal of Educational Studies 47 (4):419-421.
     
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  • What Is Natural about Epistemology Naturalized?Lorraine Code - 1996 - American Philosophical Quarterly 33 (1):1 - 22.
    I evaluate post-Quinean naturalized epistemology as a resource for postcolonial and feminist epistemology. I argue that naturalistic inquiry into material conditions and institutions of knowledge production has most to offer epistemologists committed to maintaining continuity with the knowledge production of specifically located knowers. Yet naturalistic denigrations of folk epistemic practices and stereotyped, hence often oppressive, readings of human nature challenge the naturalness of the nature they claim to study. I outline an ecologically modelled epistemology that focuses on questions of epistemic (...)
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  • Caring for the emotions: Toward a more balanced schooling.Clive Beck & Clare Madott Kosnik - forthcoming - Philosophy of Education.
     
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