1st Edition
Western and Non-Western Perspectives on Emotions in International Relations Emotional Worlds
Section I: Theoretical Framework
Chapter 1: Setting the Stage: Toward Greater Pluralism in Studies on Emotions in International Relations by Joanna Dyduch, Magdalena Kozub-Karkut and Artur Skorek.
Chapter 2: Emotions around the world: Examining emotions as a representation of the Global IR turn by Magdalena Kozub-Karkut.
Section II: Local Emotions and Global Liberal World Order
Chapter 3: Emotional responses to the liberal world order and democratic values in Pakistan’s domestic and international political discourses by Agnieszka Kuszewska-Bohnert
Chapter 4: Foreign Policy Historicism: A hawkish ideology and pragmatic operational strategy – a case study of Poland’s emotional foreign policy (2015-2023) by Joanna Dyduch
Chapter 5: Weaponizing Emotion: Post-Shame Populism, Transnational Affects, and the Making of Electoral Capital in Latin America by Agustín Tomás Alcalde
Chapter 6: Navigating contemporary poly/permacrisis: denialism and conspiracism in Brazil's far-right populist logic by Camilla Monteiro Freire and Paula Orrico Sandrin.
Section III: West Facing “The Other”: How Emotions Shape Western States’ Foreign Policies Toward Non-Western Actors?
Chapter 7: A Caring Moment: Emotion Norms in European Union - African Union Security Cooperation by John J. Hogan, Özlem Terzi.
Chapter 8: “The feminist, the egoist and the altruist”? Morality and emotions in debates on how to "save strangers" in the Polish Sejm, UK House of Commons and the European Parliament by Marcin Zubek.
Chapter 9: Solidarity and Shaming: An Emotional Dimension of Israel-Western States Relations after 7 October 2023 by Artur Skorek.
Section IV: Political Instrumentalization of Emotions
Chapter 10: China’s Anger and the Taiwan Question: Is It an Authentic Impulse or a Rational Strategy in Xi Jinping’s New Era? by Antonina Łuszczykiewicz-Mendis and Patrick Mendis.
Chapter 11: Polish-Ukrainian Conflict Over Agricultural Trade: Game of Interests or Result of Emotions? by Małgorzata Michalewska-Pawlak.
Chapter 12: Is Pain Middle Eastern? Towards accounting for the variable of pain in the social grammar of the Middle East by Noor Suwwan.
Conclusions
Biography
Joanna Dyduch is Professor at Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland, Political Scientist, and an International Relations Scholar. She heads the Department of Israel at the Institute of the Middle and Far East and is Director of the Centre for International Studies and Development at the Faculty of International and Political Studies. Her research focuses on foreign policy analysis, particularly in contemporary Israel, the European Union, and EU member states.
Magdalena Kozub-Karkut is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of International and Political Studies of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland. In research work, she deals with the Theory of Politics, International Relations Theory, Foreign Policy Analysis, Research Methodology in the Social Sciences and Theoretical Pluralism. She took part in many international workshops and conferences and is a member of the Polish International Studies Association (PTSM), Polish Political Science Association (PTNP), International Studies Association (ISA), and European International Studies Association (EISA). Since 2023, she has also been a member of the EISA Governing Board.
Artur Skorek is Adjunct Professor at the Institute of the Middle and Far East, Jagiellonian University in Kraków (UJ), Poland. He is a political scientist specializing in Israel and International Relations. He holds a PhD in International Relations and an MA in International Relations and Religion Studies from UJ. His research spans the areas of the political system in Israel, religion in international relations and foreign policies, and security in the Middle East. He served as a Chair of the European Association of Israel Studies.
“This impressive volume makes a major contribution to the study of emotions in International Relations by moving decisively beyond entrenched binaries between Western and non-Western perspectives. Through rich case studies and deeply reflective theoretical work, it illuminates the diverse emotional worlds that shape global politics. The editors and contributors succeed in advancing a genuinely pluralist Global IR approach that is both conceptually innovative and empirically grounded. A timely and much-needed intervention."
- Prof. Dr. Simon Koschut, Chair for International Security, Department of Political and Social Sciences, Zeppelin Universität
''This edited volume makes an important contribution to the study of emotions in International Relations. Providing a rich theoretical basis and a wide range of well researched case studies, it significantly expands the boundaries of the debate. This timely intervention, which looks at the relationship between emotions and international relations from a global perspective, will be of great use to students and scholars alike.''
- Professor Amnon Aran, City-St George’s University of London






