From 1a89180a383ac0d57d68a632745a21aeb5cf8a4e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zleyyij <75810274+zleyyij@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 23:45:50 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] vault backup: 2024-11-13 23:45:50 --- education/english/ENGL2010/Engl2010 Writing Project.md | 4 +++- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/education/english/ENGL2010/Engl2010 Writing Project.md b/education/english/ENGL2010/Engl2010 Writing Project.md index 5893bbd..0761448 100644 --- a/education/english/ENGL2010/Engl2010 Writing Project.md +++ b/education/english/ENGL2010/Engl2010 Writing Project.md @@ -50,7 +50,9 @@ - The author disagrees with the above sentiment, arguing that fear and anger can be intelligent, productive, emotions. - According to Ahmed, objects and rhetoric can become "sticky, or saturated with emotion" - The author then uses this to reinforce the idea that by propagating "past feelings" forward by proactively acting against them, we continue to let these ideas hold meaning, and power. + - The author refers to this propagation of fear as "habituated fear" + - - You can change the narrative around an idea, thus changing the emotions associated with it - *By designating fears \[at a societal level], we divide the world into safe spaces and unsafe spaces \[for different groups of people]* - By creating a designated "zone" of safety, you're allowing fear to restrict the space in which "targeted groups" exist in, which in turn allows "attacking groups" to grow and occupy more space -- Without the ability to attach fear to certain objects, the "world itself" becomes fearsome. Humans attach fear to certain objects, thus enableing \ No newline at end of file +- Without the ability to attach fear to certain objects, the "world itself" becomes fearsome. Humans attach fear to certain objects, thus enabling them to view the world from a simpler perspective of "safe", and "unsafe \ No newline at end of file