Compassion: The Culture and Politics of an EmotionLauren Gail Berlant Psychology Press, 2004 - 247 pages In Compassion, ten scholars draw on literature, psychoanalysis, and social history to provide an archive of cases and genealogies of compassion. Together these essays demonstrate how "being compassionate" is shaped by historical specificity and social training, and how the idea of compassion takes place in scenes that are anxious, volatile, surprising, and even contradictory. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION COMPASSION AND WITHHOLDING | 1 |
CHAPTER COMPASSION | 15 |
MUCH OF MADNESS AND MORE OF | 29 |
CALCULATING COMPASSION | 59 |
POOR HETTY | 87 |
MOVING PICTURES | 105 |
PROVOKING GEORGE ELIOT | 145 |
COMPASSIONS COMPULSION | 159 |
SUFFERING AND THINKING | 219 |
CONTRIBUTORS | 245 |
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action Adam Bede aesthetic allegory American animal argues beast-folk becomes Berlant Bush called compas compassion compassionate conservatism conservative cultural Daniel Deronda death desire Dinah Edgar Allan Poe Eichmann in Jerusalem Emerson emotion empathy essay ethical experience face fantasy father feeling feminine figure film free indirect discourse Freud gender George Eliot Gwendolen Hannah Arendt Henderson Hetty Hetty's homosexual House of Pain human imagine irony Island of Dr jouissance Justice Lacan Lauren Berlant Leonard Ligeia logic masculine meaning melodramatic tableau Mirah moral Mordecai Moreau moved narrative narrator novel novelistic novella Nussbaum one's passion person play Poe's political Prendick primal horde primal scene Psychoanalysis puma-woman readers realism reality relation representation response rhetoric seems sense sentimental sexual sinthom-osexual sion social story suffering suggests sympathy terror theatrical Thornhill Thornhill's tion trans Uncle Tom's Cabin University Press voice woman women words writes York