Journal article
Authors list: Weber, Anne-Kathrin
Publication year: 2018
Pages: 53-61
Journal: Politics and Governance
Volume number: 6
Issue number: 4
ISSN: 2183-2463
Open access status: Gold
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i4.1393
Publisher: Cogitatio Press
Abstract:
Martha Nussbaum's political theory of compassion offers an extensive and compelling study of the potential of employing compassionate emotions in the political realm to further social justice and societal "love". In this article, two pitfalls of Nussbaum's affirming theory of a politics of compassion are highlighted: the problem of a dual-level hierarchisation and the "magic" of feeling compassion that potentially removes the subject of compassion from reality. I will argue that Hannah Arendt's thoughts on pity provide substantial challenges to a democratic theory of compassion in this respect. Following these theoretical reflections, I will turn to Hillary Clinton's 2016 US-American presidential election campaign, to her video ads "Love and Kindness" in particular, in order to provide fitting illustrations from current realpolitik for these specific pitfalls of the political employment of compassionate emotions.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Weber, A. (2018) The Pitfalls of "Love and Kindness": On the Challenges to Compassion/Pity as a Political Emotion, Politics and Governance, 6(4), pp. 53-61. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i4.1393
APA Citation style: Weber, A. (2018). The Pitfalls of "Love and Kindness": On the Challenges to Compassion/Pity as a Political Emotion. Politics and Governance. 6(4), 53-61. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i4.1393
Keywords
COMPASSION; Hannah Arendt; Hillary Clinton; Martha Nussbaum; pity; TRUMP