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This essay revisits Raymond Williams’s notion of ‘structures of feeling’ with the intention of clarifying what Williams meant by ‘feelings’, and of exploring the concept’s possible range and reach within the study of culture. It recovers the initial anthropological context for the phrase by reconnecting it to the work of Ruth Benedict and Gregory Bateson. It goes on to suggest that while the analysis of ‘structures of feeling’ has been deployed primarily in studies of literary and filmic culture it might be usefully extended towards the study of more ubiquitous forms of material culture such as clothing, housing, food, furnishings and other material practices of daily living. Indeed it might be one way of explaining how formations of feeling are disseminated, how they suture us to the social world and how feelings are embedded in the accoutrements of domestic, habitual life. The essay argues that by joining together a socially phenomenological interest in the world of things, accompanied by an attention to historically specific moods and atmospheres, ‘structures of feelings’ can direct analyses towards important mundane cultural phenomena.
Funding
Habitat and the making of Taste 1964 - 2011; G1272; Leverhulme Trust; MRF-2013-158
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
Cultural Studies ReviewISSN
1837-8692Publisher
University of Sydney ePressExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
22Page range
144-167Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes