A lot has happened since notions of affect first emerged as a theoretical concept and took hold across the humanities and social sciences. The contours of what was then still confidently called Theory have blurred, morphed into something else, or vanished from sight. The political horizons of the 1990s and 2000s—the time when affect marked its most forceful interventions within theoretical discourse—look very different now, at least to many. The series „After Affects, Future Feelings“ sets out to reflect on these changes, both regarding theoretical developments and their very own structures of feeling, i.e. their shifting material and geographical conditions.
After Affects, Future Feelings – Clare Hemmings in Conversation

