Skip to main content

The concept of stimmung: From indifference to xenophobia in Germany's refugee crisis

Author(s): Borneman, John; Ghassem-Fachandi, Parvis

Download
To refer to this page use: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/pr1x179
Abstract: This article deals with the German concept of Stimmung, which does not allow a translation into the English notion of "affective mood," but rather is simultaneously an internal and external state, subjective (involving the "I") and objective (involving attunement [einstimmen] to others), enveloping both content and form. To understand the essential imbrication of individual and collective moods summoned by the term, we examine three empirical cases of Stimmungswechsel, or "mood shifts"-from indifference to ambivalence, to xenophilia and xenophobia-As they shaped the September 2016 German regional electoral campaigns. Following Sally Falk Moore, we focus on the "diagnostic events" which triggered these shifts, observed in fieldwork encounters with Germans concerning migrants and refugees who entered Germany in 2015. How did the perception and experience of "the refugee" become internal to the "mood shifts"? How is Stimmung linked to relations to refugees as psychic attachments that either echo an originary collective experience of losing home or promise submission to an experience of self-Transformation?.
Publication Date: 1-Jan-2017
Citation: Borneman, J, Ghassem-Fachandi, P. (2017). The concept of stimmung: From indifference to xenophobia in Germany's refugee crisis. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 7 (3), 105 - 135. doi:10.14318/hau7.3.006
DOI: doi:10.14318/hau7.3.006
ISSN: 2049-1115
Pages: 105 - 135
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
Version: Final published version. This is an open access article.



Items in OAR@Princeton are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.