
Emotions, Consciousness-Raising and Feminisms in the Global South
Author(s): Gabriela Silva Loureiro (Author)
- Publisher: Routledge
- Publication Date: May 23, 2025
- Edition: 1st
- Language: English
- Print length: 160 pages
- ISBN-10: 1032499176
- ISBN-13: 9781032499178
Book Description
This book is about the role of emotions in the creation and dissipation of feminist collectives and grapples with difficult questions that have been circulating for a while in activist circles but are far from answered. What are the emotions involved in building and sustaining solidarity? What can we learn from previous “waves” of feminist activism, and what is worth saving in social media activism today?
These questions are tackled via the discourse analysis of hashtagged posts of two popular feminist hashtags in Brazil (#PrimeiroAssédio and #MeuAmigoSecreto) and interviews with Brazilian feminist actors. But instead of merely analysing the content of the hashtags or over-celebrating aesthetics, I interpret them as empirical evidence of the emotional life of varied feminisms and therefore useful to reflect upon historical build-ups and dissipation of solidarity.
The unique feature of the book is making a bridge between sociology of emotions, feminist theory, and decolonial, Black, and Global South literature and praxis that articulate solidarity based on principles of difference instead of sameness. This book will be of interest to students, scholars, teachers, activists, and community members interested in the emotions involved in building and sustaining feminist solidarity from a non-Western perspective.
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About the Author
Gabriela Silva Loureiro is a feminist scholar with a strong synergy between research and teaching. Her main research interests are genders, sexualities, antiracism, decoloniality, and emotions. She currently works as a lecturer in sociology at the University of Wollongong, Australia, having held previous teaching and research positions in the UK. Her recent outputs look at the meaning-making of gender-based violence in Brazil (2023) and the work of Marielle Franco as an embodiment of Black feminist praxis (2020).
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