Talk
|
In-Person

Too Much Emotion or Not Enough? Empathy and the Public Sphere

Date
Thu
,
Jan 15
Time
6:30 pm
-
8:00 pm
Location
Liederkranz Club, 6 E. 87th Street, New York, NY
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Commentators from across the political spectrum as well as ordinary citizens have remarked what could appear as contradictory trends:  on the one hand, feelings seem to be at an historic intensity—everyone is very angry or very enthusiastic or very disappointed or very supportive or very worried or very optimistic--and on the other, it seems as if many folks can no longer feel anything at all. Both trends seem to suppress compassion for fellow citizens who do not hold one’s own political views or belong to one’s social or ethnic group.

This Humanities for Humans conversation, featuring Jennifer Evans (Professor of History at Carleton University), Suzanne Keen (author of Empathy and the Novel), and moderated by Irene Kacandes, will ask: Can democracy survive what we might want to call the factionalization of empathy? Can traditional alliances survive the negative political rhetoric being hurled across North America and across the Atlantic? Terms like “affect” “conviviality”, “cruelty”, “empathy”, “kindness”, “solidarity”, and “suffering” will be defined and discussed, shedding light on how feelings get generated by and mobilized through political speech.

Furthermore, the conversation will explore if empathy can be taught; What can history teach us about how specific actors cultivate emotions in citizens? What can literature and the arts teach us? What strategies can enhance progress toward solutions that improve life for most people?‍

Doors open at 6:00 PM, event begins promptly at 6:30 PM