Reflection Patterns of Emotions Left by Fatal Female Violence in Turkey Assiye AKA Department of Sociology, Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University, Turkey Email: akaasiye@comu.edu.tr Abstract: In Turkey, in recent years, the escalating increase in fatal violence against women continues to pose a vital challenge. This frightening situation is rapidly pushing some women away from safe living spaces and forcing others to seek new ways to address the problem in digital spaces. In fact, lethal violence against women is often a continuation of general patterns of sexist discrimination against women. It is also a consequence of the persistent violence perpetrated against some women by mechanisms that turn a blind eye to the impunity of perpetrators. In this study , three emotions (hate, fear and trust/distrust,) obtained from 84 semi-structured questionnaires and tweets about the prevention of femicide in Turkey were analysed. In this context, the study has two interrelated aims. The first of these is to identify and evaluate the deep traces left by fatal female violence in individual and social memory. The second is to discuss the legal, socio- political and individual measures that need to be taken urgently to eliminate this brutal form of punishment. In the study, 79491 tweets were used for quantitative impact analysis and qualitative analysis was conducted on 14214 individual tweets ranked in terms of impact. In addition, the content analysis of the web questionnaire conducted with 84 people was conducted. The main finding of the study is that emotions occur simultaneously and together, and the emotions of hatred, fear and insecurity are closely related to each other. Keywords: Hatred; Fear; Trust; Distrust; Femicide. INTRODUCTION In order to draw attention to the lethal violence against women in Turkey, this study examines the problematic of how negative emotions such as trust/distrust, hatred and fear affect/damage social and individual memory. In this context, the main claim of the study is that destructive hegemonic masculinity, which has heavy costs individually, socio/culturally, socio/politically and legally, deconstructs 'social development', and reproduces the culture of hegemonic masculinity/s, which punishes women through their own selves at different times and in different forms, and thus inflicts violence on them by leaving permanent traumas, has been analyzed as a dependent/independent variable. Thus, the relationship between these three basic emotions and their possible social-cultural roles/effects on the prevention of femicides, which are of vital importance as independent variables, were reviewed. HATRED To hate someone is to be offended by their mere existence. The only satisfaction would be for him to disappear completely - José Ortega y Gasset Hate is a way of relating to ourselves and others. It is another way of saying that at the same time as we structure our relationships with others, we also structure our psyche, ourselves. Our relationships with others are not reflected in the psychic structure; the relationship is more subtle than that. But as intrapsychic relationships resonate with extra psychic ones, a principle remains (Alford 2006, p. 85). Much of what is written about hate today assumes that what we really hate is the "other". Unassimilated otherness and difference are almost unbearable for the darkened human psyche. According to some theorists, such as Elaine Pagels (1995), otherness itself has a demonic character (Alford 2006, pp. 85- 86). In fact, we project onto the other what we cannot accept in ourselves. Hate is more than intolerance of otherness. Hatred is an expression of the death drive in the field of knowledge (Alford 2006, p. 86). Hate is a passionate obsession with the other rather than the absence of love. Even strong hatred (or love) alone does not motivate action, even if it is often a background condition (Jasper and Owens 2014, p. 532). Hate is literally a state of feeling the desire to destroy or at least to hurt. Hate may therefore seem to include both anger (the desire to destroy) and "Reading the Panoptic Effects of Femicide on Twitter: The Case of Turkey" was supported by Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit. Project Number: 3186, code: SBA-2020." 8 ATSK Journal of Sociology, 2022, Volume 1, Issue 1, Article 2, 8-22