“EMPATHY HAS BIOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS, BUT CULTURE DETERMINES WHO WILL BE THE SUBJECT OF THAT IDENTIFICATION”

Autor/innen

  • Lynn Hunt University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), CA
  • Cilza Bignotto
  • Carlos cortez Minchillo

Schlagworte:

Human rights, theory, empathetic reading, literature and history

Abstract

Can literature promote identification with the suffering of others and an empathetic connection between readers and fictional characters? Can this sentiment of sympathy translate into social solidarity and have political consequences? In this interview, professor and historian Lynn Hunt discusses the interplay between literature and human rights and reflects on our relationship to history, the fragility of democracy, and the self and society duality.

Veröffentlicht

2024-06-10

Zitationsvorschlag

Hunt, L., Bignotto, C., & Minchillo, C. cortez. (2024). “EMPATHY HAS BIOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS, BUT CULTURE DETERMINES WHO WILL BE THE SUBJECT OF THAT IDENTIFICATION”. Revista Brasileira De Literatura Comparada, 23(43), 134–139. Abgerufen von http://rblc.com.br/index.php/rblc/article/view/617

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