The Emotional Economies of Protestant Missions to Aboriginal People in Nineteenth-Century Australia

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  • Claire Louise McLisky
Taking Norbert Elias’ ideas about emotional change as its foil, this paper explores the changing role and function of emotion on late-nineteenth century Protestant missions in Australia. Like Elias, though for religious rather than historical reasons, missionaries during this period conceived of emotional control in terms of social development. Yet missionaries were not the only agents of emotional change, and their emotional agendas were not always realised in the ways that they had anticipated. Rather, this paper proposes that both missionaries and Aboriginal residents were participants in systems of emotional circulation and exchange which I conceptualise as ‘emotional economies’.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEmotions and Social Change : Historical and Sociological Perspectives
EditorsDavid Lemmings, Ann Brooks
Number of pages17
PublisherRoutledge
Publication date1 Apr 2014
Pages82-98
Chapter5
ISBN (Print)978-0-415-85605-8
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2014
SeriesRoutledge Studies in Social and Political Thought

    Research areas

  • Faculty of Humanities - Missionshistorie, Aboriginal history, Australian history, Følelseshistorie

ID: 137470979