MetaTOC stay on top of your field, easily

Unmarked Emotional States and the Affective Anchoring of Continuity

Sociological Forum

Published online on

Abstract

["Sociological Forum, EarlyView. ", "\nABSTRACT\nNarratives around emotions often foreground remarkable episodes that interrupt situations, producing a “rollercoaster” image of emotional life that leaves its stability underdescribed. To analyze the emotional dimension of social continuity, this article theorizes unmarked emotional states (UES): culturally default, interactionally unobtrusive conditions that make situations feel already underway and not in need of reframing. Using emotional markedness, it shows how actors and analysts re‐mark seemingly unsettling emotions and downplay the affective halo of ordinary action. Calmness serves as a strategic case, specifying UES as (a) full‐fledged affective engagements, (b) durational forms of attachment between peaks, and (c) coordination‐friendly stances that lower accounting demands. Interactional calming practices and infrastructural emotional banisters are then identified as processes that secure affective regularity, the patterned return of UES, and because access to emotional unmarkedness is socially stratified, the same mechanisms that anchor continuity can also naturalize unequal arrangements. Finally, the conclusion reframes continuity as the feeling of staying on path, detailing the emotional components that increase the likelihood of continuity.\n"]