Towards a Sociology of Hope (2)

Wednesday, 9 July 2025: 09:00-10:45
Location: SJES022 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
WG08 Society and Emotions (host committee)

Language: English, French and Spanish

Hope has colours of multiplicity, ranging from philosophy, ethics, economics and sociology. It can be taken as a political principle, a philosophical virtue, a religious norm, an emotion or a social practice. In fact, in sociology, hope has been thematised in association with revolutions, utopias and optimism only to emphasise three research fields with which it is most usually connected. Books such as "The Principle of Hope" (Bloch, 1986), "The Revolution of Hope" (Fromm, 1968), and " The Sociology of Hope" (Desroche, 1979) are recurring testimonies of emotional ecology, where different practices are inscribed on diverse transformations, changes, and future actions. So far in the 21st century, hope has also been thematised in connection with social movements against neoliberalism (Dinerstein, 2015), hope about interconnections concerning welfare, culture on European migration (Norocel, et al. 2020), and the centrality of hope from diverse theological and philosophical approaches (van den Heuvel, S. C. 2020).
In this context, we propose to open a space for discussion on the construction of a sociology of hope that is nourished by social theory in general and the sociology of emotions in particular. We call for papers on the epistemic and methodological foundations, on the theoretical components, on the experiences of empirical inquiry and on the role of the sociology of hope in social criticism.
We encourage the presentation from a plural, post-intersectional, post-speciesist and postcolonial perspective to elaborate a systematic reflection on hope as practices that anticipate the future and transform the world.
Session Organizer:
Paul WARD, Torrens University, Australia
Chair:
Alexandre ZARIAS, Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Brazil
Oral Presentations
Biography As a Carrier of Hope
Rixta WUNDRAK MARIA, Fulda University, Germany
Hope As a Generational Divide
Cecile VAN DE VELDE, Université de Montréal, Canada
Governing through Affect: Sense of Inevitability
Sunhan KIM, Jeonbuk National University, South Korea
Examining Foundations of Hope through the Lens of Optimism
Giuliana MANDICH, University of Cagliari, Italy
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