The Compassionate Temperament: Care and Cruelty in Modern SocietyThe argument of this book is that it is in the nature of modernity to foster compassion. Most critics tend to think of modernity as corrosive of moral sentiments. They see clearly the way in which modernity breaks down older social bonds, but they are much less attentive to the ways in which it also builds new ones. This book offers an historically informed corrective to this common view. Sznaider demonstrates that compassion, understood as the organized campaign to lessen the suffering of strangers, is a distinctly modern form of morality. It played an important role in the rise of modern society, and it continues to play an important role today. And when waves of compassion break out into demands for political action, these demands need to be understood rather than criticized as excuses or irrelevancies. Incorporating and critiquing the work of Arendt, Foucault, and other social theorists, this book is both erudite and historically rich—sure to be both controversial and influential among those who debate modernity, morality, and social justice. |
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النتائج 1-5 من 34
الصفحة 1
And if we understand the nature of compassion and its connection to social structure, we can explain many social movements today that otherwise seem accidental, unprecedented, and postmodern. The idea that the sight of suffering imposes ...
And if we understand the nature of compassion and its connection to social structure, we can explain many social movements today that otherwise seem accidental, unprecedented, and postmodern. The idea that the sight of suffering imposes ...
الصفحة 3
... we consider that genocide is continually recurring, or threatening to recur, and that it bears the same relation to late twentieth-century movements of compassion as social questions bore to those of the early nineteenth century.
... we consider that genocide is continually recurring, or threatening to recur, and that it bears the same relation to late twentieth-century movements of compassion as social questions bore to those of the early nineteenth century.
الصفحة 4
Humanitarian movements delegitimized earlier values and practices and set up a new moral code in their place. Cruelty became understood as the infliction of suffering without the old justification for it, and compassion in organized ...
Humanitarian movements delegitimized earlier values and practices and set up a new moral code in their place. Cruelty became understood as the infliction of suffering without the old justification for it, and compassion in organized ...
الصفحة 9
Modern humanitarian movements arose in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Movements to abolish slavery and cruelty to prisoners, animals, and children and to reform factories, sanitation, and prisons were organized during that ...
Modern humanitarian movements arose in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Movements to abolish slavery and cruelty to prisoners, animals, and children and to reform factories, sanitation, and prisons were organized during that ...
الصفحة 10
In such views public compassion and humanitarian movements are incompatible with the self-interested rationality of market society, but are “carryover” effects from precapitalist eras or noneconomic factors constraining the market.
In such views public compassion and humanitarian movements are incompatible with the self-interested rationality of market society, but are “carryover” effects from precapitalist eras or noneconomic factors constraining the market.
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المحتوى
1 | |
7 | |
Pain and Compassion | 25 |
Cruelty to Children | 45 |
Democracy and Child Welfare | 61 |
The Universalization of Compassion | 83 |
Conclusion | 99 |
Bibliography | 105 |
Index | 123 |
About the Author | 129 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
agape American American Humane Association Arendt argued ASPCA Bauman became Cambridge capitalism charity chil child labor child-welfare childhood Children’s Aid Society Christian citizens civil society classes compassionate concept cruel cruelty to animals Cruelty to Children culture defined definition democracy democratic domesticity dren Durkheim duty Elias emergence emotional ethical expressed fight first Foucault freedom German God’s Hannah Arendt Henry Bergh historical human humanitarian idea ideal identified individual inflicted influence Jews juvenile court legislation liberal society market society middle-class modern moral sentiments mothers movements National nature neglect Nietzsche nineteenth century official one’s organized Orig pain parents passion people’s political poor Prevention of Cruelty principle problem public compassion quoted in Bremner Rauhe Haus reflected reporting laws Scottish Enlightenment sexual abuse Social Gospel sociology sociology of morals specific sphere Stjepan Mestrovic suffering theory tion torture University Press victims violence welfare women York Society