ABSTRACT
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.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |31 pages
Cosmetic Surgeons of the Social
Darwin, Freud, and Wells and the Limits of Sympathy on The Island of Dr. Moreau