How is it possible to feel an affinity with a place? What is happening
when someone feels almost literally transported to another time by a
smell or a texture or a song? Why do striking family resemblances
sometimes feel uncanny? In each of these cases a potent connection is
being made, involving forces, flows, energies and atmospherics that
conventional sociological approaches can find hard to grasp, but that
are important nonetheless.
In this innovative book Jennifer Mason argues that these are
affinities - potent charges and charismatically lively connections in
personal life, that rise up and matter in some way and that enchant or
toxify the everyday. She suggests that exploring affinities opens up new
possibilities for conceptualizing the experience of living in the world
through what she calls the 'socio-atmospherics of everyday life'. This
book invites the reader to embrace possibilities and themes that may
seem outside the usual range, and to engage in a more open, attentive,
inventive and poetic sociological sensibility.