2nd Draine Conference – Hate Speech and Emotions: Ideological and Epistemological Issues
Wednesday 21 – Friday 23 May 2025, Grenoble, France
Draine (Hate and social breakdown: discourse and performativity) is a group of researchers in Language Sciences, working around hate speech and so-called radical discourse and the respective genres linked to them. The group was born in autumn 2016 out of the European H2020 Practicies project (Partnership Against Violent Radicalization Online in the Cities). It now has around 30 members from eight countries (Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany and Italy) and 18 institutions and universities, working together on research projects and publications. In October 2020, the Draine was awarded an ANR Montage de Réseau Scientifique Européens ou Internationaux (MRSEI) grant to prepare the submission of a funding application for a Horizon Europe project in 2022. In July 2022, the ARENAS (Analysis of and Responses to Extremist NArrativeS) project led by Julien Longhi was selected and several members of the Draine group have been working on it ever since.
For more information: https://groupedraine.github.io/index.html
The last few years have been marked by the publication of numerous works on hate speech in the human and social sciences (Bianchi 2021, Droin 2018, Monnier et al. 2021, Petrilli 2020). In language sciences, the emphasis has been placed on how hatred is put into words (Moïse et al. 2021), on argumentative and rhetorical strategies used by speakers (Hart 2021, Micheli 2010, Reisigl and Wodak 2015, Vernet and Määttä 2023), on the performativity of hate speech and its social implications (Määttä, 2023), taking into account group relationships (Baider and Constantinou 2020, Balirano and Hughes 2020), ideological dimensions and enunciation contexts (Longhi and Vernet 2023, Retta 2023). With regard to works stemming from other disciplines (among others Delaplace 2009, Moïsi 2009, Négrier and Faure 2017), the issue of emotions related to hate speech appears to be less documented in language sciences. While the pathemic dimension has been the subject of certain studies, particularly as a defining characteristic of direct hate speech (Lorenzi Bailly and Moïse 2021), the role and place of affects in the analysis of hate speech and its categorization remain to be explored further.
Hatred, understood as a “sad passion” (Spinoza 1677 [2007]), is carried by emotions – anger, fear, disgust, shame, resentment, among others – that are addressed towards another being (converted into the object of the hatred) and activated by wounds, among individual histories, socio-political contexts, and ideological conflicts. These emotions then pass through hatreds which are expressed in discourse according to different modalities (Lorenzi Bailly and Moïse 2023). Emotions can be manifested through “ statements of emotion ” (Plantin 2011) which directly utters what is felt (“I am devastated”) in an axiological way (“that is outrageous”) or even “ volcanic ” (Beebe 1995) or “ non contained ” (Culperer 2011) towards others. Furthermore, the pathemic expression in discourse, which will push the speaker to provoke anger, contempt or pity, allows hatred to circulate, if not to amplify it. Emotions are also expressed through the recounting of an event (Rimé 2009) and these aim to share what cannot be retained in lively reactions where indignation and oppositions are expressed, as well as injustices and inequalities. Hate speech then questions what is at the center of social concerns.
By means of a critical perspective (Guedj et al. 2022), this conference aims to further question the link between hate speech and emotions by investigating its social and ideological reach, along with the articulation of the individual and collective dimensions of hatred. In a time of political and social tensions on the one hand and, on the other hand, in a neoliberal system which values certain forms of extimité (Tisseron 2011), how and according to which modalities of emotions take part in the making of hate speech? What are the speeches taken up by hatred, by whom are they conveyed and for what goals? If we consider that it is not the affects themselves that circulate, but the objects to which they are attached (Ahmed 2014), what is the role of emotions in the circulation of hate speech and what are the consequences of this phenomenon? Finally, what do these speeches say about the (social and ideological) changes underway, and based on what emotional manifestations?
This conference also envisions questioning the emotional implications of using the label “hate speech”. What is the ideological aspect of this tag? What can its use lead to? What does it drive one to utter and in whose interests? Since this label is also used by the scientific community, these same questions also seem important to be posed in relation to our research practices and, more broadly, with regard to the practices of all the protagonists who use it.
Find more information and book your place here: https://draine.sciencesconf.org/?lang=en
This event will be held at Saint-Martin-d’Hères Campus, Université Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France.