Beyond Compassion
This is a call to engage with the histories of emotions and the senses, as well as with the new history of experiences, in order to write a gendered history of humanitarian action. This Element challenges essentialist interpretations according to which women have undertaken humanitarian action because of their allegedly compassionate nature. Instead, it shows how humanitarianism has allowed women to participate in international politics by claiming their rights as citizens, struggling against class inequalities, racial segregation and sexual discrimination in the light of disparate feelings such as resentment, hope, trust, shame and indignation. Ultimately, these case studies are understood to represent historically created moral economies of care: distinctive ways of feeling, performing and knowing humanitarianism which have evolved in relation to shifting emotional values associated with what it means to be human. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Product details
December 2023Paperback
9781009417099
75 pages
230 × 153 × 5 mm
0.137kg
Not yet published - available from February 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Helvetic emotions
- 2. Gendering humanitarian compassion
- 3. Experiences in the long second world war
- 4. The French touch
- 5. Blue humanitarianism
- 6. Conclusion
- References.