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Fruits of Sorrow

Elizabeth V. Spelman

$35

Paperback

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English
Beacon Press
01 September 2018
Through a remarkable blend of intellectual history, philosophical reading, and contemporary cultural analysis, Fruits of Sorrow explores the hidden dynamics at work when we try to make sense of suffering. Spelman examines the complex ways in which we try to redeem the pain we cause and witness. She also shows the way our responses are often more than they seem- how compassion can mask condescension; how identifying with others' pain often slips into illicit appropriation; how pity can reinforce the unequal relationship between those who cause and those who endure suffering.
By:  
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 13mm
Weight:   258g
ISBN:   9780807014219
ISBN 10:   0807014214
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Fruits of Sorrow

A fastidiously logical look at some paradoxes of suffering. Suffering: it is dirty work, but sometimes there are spiritual profits to be gained. Spelman (Philosophy/Smith Coll.) goes at her subject from varied points of view - including Platonic and Aristotelian approaches, those of suffragists and of contemporary feminists - in this concise and selective analytical survey. In one chapter she considers the implications of art that portrays sufferers and suffering, and revisits dance critic Arlene Croce's controversial condemnation in the New Yorker a few years ago of Bill T. Jones's dance about AIDS, Still/Here - which Croce chose not to see. Spelman observes: Croce is right: she didn't need to see the dance to say what she had to say. But to many who actually saw the dance, she in fact needed not to see the dance to say what she had to say. In a chapter that explores cruelty to women by other women, Spelman exposes with useful candor a problem seemingly suppressed by most feminists. The history of women's inhumanity to women is a shameful aspect of the history of women, she writes. Though her contextual arguments are carefully waged, lay readers may especially appreciate the insights that emerge more loosely, by the by, and are accessible to almost anyone who has suffered: Tragedies, Spelman remarks, do not simply require the pain of innocent victims produced by the flaws of an otherwise good person; they suggest that this is a cost that can perhaps be redeemed by the insight it gives us about the human condition. Comments like this give the faithful reader, occasionally numbed by the writer's dryness of tone, something unequivocal to keep hold of. If understanding suffering could make it go away, then Spelman's book would become a bestseller. (Kirkus Reviews)


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