Enduring Emotions: James L. Halliday and the Invention of the Psychosocial

Emotions maintain an ambivalent position in the economy of science. In contemporary debates they are variously seen as hardwired biological responses, cultural artifacts, or uneasy mixtures of the two. At the same time, there is a tension between the approaches to emotion developed in modern psychot...

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Veröffentlicht in:Isis 2009-12, Vol.100 (4), p.827-838
1. Verfasser: Hayward, Rhodri
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description Emotions maintain an ambivalent position in the economy of science. In contemporary debates they are variously seen as hardwired biological responses, cultural artifacts, or uneasy mixtures of the two. At the same time, there is a tension between the approaches to emotion developed in modern psychotherapies and in the history of science. While historians see the successful ascription of affective states to individuals and populations as a social and technical achievement, the psychodynamic practitioner treats these enduring associations as pathological accidents that need to be overcome. This short essay uses the career of the Glaswegian public health investigator James L. Halliday to examine how debates over the ontological status of the emotions and their durability allow them to travel between individual identity and political economy, making possible new kinds of psychological intervention.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE
subjects Affectivity
Anxiety
Careers
Disease Outbreaks - history
Diseases
Emotion
Emotion theories
Emotional distress
Emotional expression
Emotional states
Emotions
Epidemiology
Focus: The Emotional Economy of Science
Glasgow
Halliday
Halliday, James L
History of medicine
History of science
History, 20th Century
Humans
Identity
Influenza, Human - history
Natural law
Nature
Ontology
Pathology
Philosophy - history
Political economy
Psychological aspects
Psychology - history
Psychosomatic Medicine - history
Psychosomatics
Psychotherapy
Public health
Science
Science history
Scotland
Social psychology
United Kingdom
Value systems
title Enduring Emotions: James L. Halliday and the Invention of the Psychosocial
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