Sara Ahmed discusses in her article “Affective Economies,” her own explanation to emotions and how people create them. She also discusses how the littlest outside factors can effect ones emotions about something. She begins by stating different examples of “hate” that are common in the United States like a white man scowling at a mixed race couple or a farmer furious that the government loans billions of dollars to foreigners when he can’t get a loan to save his farm and she names this love. This gives a perfect example of what she explains in her article, which is that hate is not really hate. The hate is not based on the subject but it comes from within the person that expresses it. That because they love something so much, whatever interferes with what they love they express anger towards them. This anger can be effected by other smaller problems that build up to hate and soon enough anyone that even comes close to what they hate for example being the same race, having similar looks, religion, or even names become a part of it. Sara Ahmed tells that hate is made from within the person and move outwards onto people, things, places, or anything. She similarly addressed her explanation to fear. Fear is not actually being afraid of something but it is a way of avoiding something much bigger that the person themselves might not really notice. Fear of a certain object is supposed to be the symptom of what you actually fear. For example she includes that Hans had a fear of horses which is actually replacing his fear of castration (125). For the fears replacing the real fear can be managed but is kept because their real fear can’t be managed. Ahmed argues that emotions are all within ourselves and the subject of our emotions is not the problem but only the victim.
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