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HomeCollective emotions

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Published on Monday, March 14, 2016

Abstract

Since the writings of the first social psychologists and sociologists of the 20th century, collective behavior has continuously been perceived as a fundamental threat to social and political order. When immersed in large groups, individuals are thought to lose any capacity of self-evaluation and to show anti-social behavior. In crowds, the increased sensitivity to others’ emotions – whose power of contagion was long thought to be as intense as that of infectious diseases – is supposed to turn a reunion of perfectly rational humans into a group of violent rioters. Furthermore, the primordial role of mass movements during the era of totalitarianisms has, without any doubt, reinforced the idea that collective emotions are essentially harmful, for both individuals and communities.

Announcement

Conference organized by Julie Grèzes (Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris), Guillaume Dezecache (Universities of Neuchâtel and Portsmouth) and Gretty Mirdal, director of the Paris IAS, with the support of the Department of Cognitive studies (ENS) and the École des Neurosciences de Paris Ile-de-France.

Presentation

Since the writings of the first social psychologists and sociologists of the 20th century, collective behavior has continuously been perceived as a fundamental threat to social and political order. When immersed in large groups, individuals are thought to lose any capacity of self-evaluation and to show anti-social behavior. In crowds, the increased sensitivity to others’ emotions – whose power of contagion was long thought to be as intense as that of infectious diseases – is supposed to turn a reunion of perfectly rational humans into a group of violent rioters. Furthermore, the primordial role of mass movements during the era of totalitarianisms has, without any doubt, reinforced the idea that collective emotions are essentially harmful, for both individuals and communities.

Recent collective movements, such as Occupy Wall Street or the Arab Springs, have however shed light on a different aspect of collective behavior. Rather than being deleterious in essence, emotional collective movements are above all sources and mechanisms of social changes. They may also constitute a fundamental step in the process of community resilience, as seen in the spontaneous mass demonstrations organized in Paris following the attacks in Paris in 2015. The idea that the collective is a source of both individual and collective achievement is at the heart of the modern social psychology of crowd behavior.

This essential tension at the heart of collective behavior – a source of both individual and collective achievements but also a factor of potential escalation of violence and conflict, in particular towards the out-group – is still persistent in contemporary debates. Mass movements are once again becoming major political actors, and the development of new information technologies (such as the online social networks) has largely increased the communities’ reactiveness and ability to mobilize. It thus appears urgent to call for a scientific meeting on the topic of collective emotions, their causes and consequences for both individuals and communities, and their very dynamics, in the past as well as nowadays, in the digital era.

Eight fundamental themes will be explored: (1) what does it mean for emotions to be collective rather than individual?; (2) how has collective behavior classically been perceived since the nineteenth century?; (3) what role do emotions play in the emergence and consolidation of mass political movements?; (4) how is group behavior structured and sustained?; (5) what are the individual and collective psychological consequences of the participation to emotional collective movements?; (6) how can political institutions react to and cope with mass movements (collective and individual responsibility)? ; (7) finally, what role do online social networks play in the mobilization of the masses?

Program

Day 1 (April 14th)

  • 9.00 – Participants welcome
  • 9.30 – Introduction (Gretty Mirdal & Guillaume Dezecache)

9.45 – Session 1: When emotions become collective

Chair: Elisabeth Pacherie (IJN - Paris)

  • 9.45 – What are collective emotions? Philosophical perspectives Mikko Salmela (University of Helsinki)
  • 10.30 – Psychosocial Effects of Collective Emotional Gatherings Bernard Rimé (Louvain Catholic University)
  • 11.15 – Coffee break

11.30 – Session 2: Collective behavior: social and historical representations

Chair: Laura Spinney (Paris)

  • 11.30 – Imagining the Worst: the black legend of collective revolt in the 19th century, c. 1840 - c. 1895 Robert Tombs (University of Cambridge)
  • 12.15 – TBA Simon Wessely (Psychiatrist, King’s College London)
  • 13.00 – Lunch break

14.00 – Session 3: Mass gatherings: emergence, dynamics and social control

Chair: Gloria Origgi (IJN - Paris)

  • 14.00 – From Social Emotions to Collective Emotions: Public Events as Emotional Tests Laurence Kaufmann (University of Lausanne)
  • 14.45 – Digital enthusiasm and the formation of online crowds Paolo Gerbaudo (King’s College London)
  • 15.30 – Coffee break
  • 15.45 – TBA Steve Reicher (University of St Andrews)
  • 16.30 – On the role of a social identity analysis in articulating structure and collective action: the 2011 riots in Tottenham and Hackney Clifford Stott (University of Leeds)

Day 2 (April 15th)

  • 9.00 – Participants welcome

9.15 – Session 4: The social psychology of social emotions

Chair: Guillaume Dezecache (Universities of Neuchâtel and Portsmouth)

  • 9.15 – Beyond "contagion"? Social identification as boundary condition and mechanism in involuntary influence of aggression John Drury (University of Sussex) & L. Verlander, Steve Reicher, Clifford Stott
  • 10.00 – Understanding Collective Emotions: Theory and Related Evidence Christian von Scheve (Free University of Berlin) 
  • 10.45 – Coffee break

11.00 – Session 5: The cognitive neuroscience of social emotions: pleasure, fear and anxiety

Chair: Etienne Koechlin (LNC - Paris)

  • 11.00 – Empathy in music and dance: the role of pleasure and emotion Morten L. Kringelbach (University of Oxford)
  • 11.45 – Perceiving and reacting to threat: individual and collective levels of analysis Julie Grèzes (INSERM U960 - Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris) & Guillaume Dezecache (Universities of Neuchâtel and Portsmouth) 
  • 12.45 – Lunch break

13.45 – Session 6: Modelling collective behavior

Chair: TBA

  • 13.45 – The Hive: Experimenting with the Group Mind Daniel C. Richardson & Jorina von Zimmerman (Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London)
  • 14.45 – The decision precedes the action: the importance of pre-departure period in collective movements Odile Petit (Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien)

15.30 – Coffee break

15.45 – Session 7: Far from the madding crowd: the psychology and neuroscience of exclusion and social pain

Chair: Julie Grèzes (INSERM U960 - Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris)

  • 15.45 – Behavioral and emotional consequences of social exclusion in Human and rats Philippe Fossati & Anna Fall (ICM Paris)  
  • 16.45 – Concluding remarks and final discussion
  • 17.00 – End of the colloquium

Inscription

http://www.paris-iea.fr/fr/evenements/collective-emotions

Places

  • Institut d'études avancées de Paris, Hôtel de Lauzun, 17 quai d'Anjou
    Paris, France (75004)

Date(s)

  • Thursday, April 14, 2016
  • Friday, April 15, 2016

Keywords

  • collective behavior, group, social behaviour, crowd, emotion, mass movement, collective movement, community, mass demonstration, crowd behaviour, mobilization, digital era, online social network, political movement, new information technologies

Contact(s)

  • Informations IEA de Paris
    courriel : information [at] paris-iea [dot] fr

Information source

  • Élodie Saubatte
    courriel : elodie [dot] saubatte [at] paris-iea [dot] fr

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Collective emotions », Conference, symposium, Calenda, Published on Monday, March 14, 2016, https://doi.org/10.58079/ui6

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