Abstract This study extends Durkheim’s (The elementary forms of the religious life, Free Press, New York, 1912) concept of collective effervescence by racializing it through the lived experiences of Black graduate and professional students. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 31 participants, we conceptualize Black Collective Effervescence (BCE) as a culturally specific, embodied, and communal form of emotional energy experienced as Black joy. Findings highlight three central tenets of BCE: (1) the “electricity” of collective effervescence as racialized joy, (2) the inherently collective nature of Black joy rooted in community and relationality, and (3) the embodied, physiological manifestations of shared emotional experience. By centering Black joy as an analytic lens and lived phenomenon, this study challenges the presumed universality of classical sociological theory and offers BCE as an evolved framework that accounts for race and structural context.
Carpenter et al. (Fri,) studied this question.