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- Title
“Happier than Non-Christians”: Collective Emotions and Symbolic Boundaries among Evangelical Christians.
- Authors
Wilkins, Amy C.
- Abstract
This article uses qualitative data (participant-observation and interviews) to examine happiness talk in a university-based evangelical Christian organization (University Unity). Unity Christians claim that they are happier than non-Christians, but rather than viewing their happiness as a mental health outcome of their participation in a religious organization, I view it as a cultural phenomenon—a way of talking and thinking about their emotions. I show how Unity participants learn to think of themselves as happy, learn to adjust their emotional responses and view their managed emotions as authentic, and learn to link happiness to their moral selves. Unity's emotion work helps participants achieve happiness, but because it also disallows any negative emotions, such happiness is compulsory. One cannot be a Unity Christian if one is not happy. In Unity, then, happiness is a symbolic boundary—participants see themselves as happier (and more authentically so) than others—but this feeling is also material in the crafting of more complex moral boundaries in which happiness is both sign and cause of other kinds of “goodness.” Happiness is an effective boundary not just because Unity Christians themselves want to be happy, but because most members of the middle class want to be happy, and because it builds on broader associations between happiness and morality. Inasmuch as happiness signals morality, unhappiness signals immorality.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CHRISTIANS; NON-church-affiliated people; HAPPINESS testing; EVANGELICALISM; RELIGIOUS life of college students; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008, Vol 71, Issue 3, p281
- ISSN
0190-2725
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/019027250807100308