Distant Suffering Morality, Media and Politics |
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Author:
| Boltanski, Luc |
Contribution by:
| Alexander, Jeffrey C. Seidman, Steven |
Translator:
| Burchell, Graham D. |
Series title: | Cambridge Cultural Social Studies |
ISBN: | 978-0-521-65953-6 |
Publication Date: | Oct 1999 |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | AUD $43.95 |
Book Description:
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Images of starving children, bombed villages and mass graves brought to us by television in the comfort of our homes implicitly call upon us to act. What can we do when the suffering we see is so distant and we feel powerless compared with the forces behind the suffering? Luc Boltanski examines the ways in which, since the end of the eighteenth-century, spectators have tried to respond acceptably to what they have seen, and discusses whether there remains a place for pity in modern politics.
Images of starving children, bombed villages and mass graves brought to us by television in the comfort of our homes implicitly call upon us to act. What can we do when the suffering we see is so distant and we feel powerless compared with the forces behind the suffering? Luc Boltanski examines the ways in which, since the end of the eighteenth-century, spectators have tried to respond acceptably to what they have seen, and discusses whether there remains a place for pity in modern politics.