| نویسندگان | Katayoun Zarei Toossi |
| نشریه | International Journal of Arabic-English Studies |
| شماره صفحات | 253-272 |
| شماره سریال | 21 |
| شماره مجلد | 2 |
| نوع مقاله | Full Paper |
| تاریخ انتشار | 2021 |
| رتبه نشریه | ISI |
| نوع نشریه | الکترونیکی |
| کشور محل چاپ | لبنان |
| نمایه نشریه | Scopus |
چکیده مقاله
At a time when global interdependence has become our destiny more than ever,
empathy and the ability to empathize have been increasingly praised as skills necessary
for better social and political interactions. However, as the studies on international
politics of emotion to empathy have argued, empathy is culturally and historically
contingent and its productive possibilities might be limited by differentials of power. The
present paper engages the politics of empathy with a focus on Muhsin Hamid’s The
Reluctant Fundamentalist as a transnational text to show problems on the way of
empathetic engagement with the Muslim other in the aftermath of 9/11. It will argue that
by creating an interrogative mood and especially by depicting two scenarios of successful
and unsuccessful empathetic engagement which indicate empathy as a site of tense power
dynamics contingent on positionalities of those involved, the novel offers a critique of the
detached, goal oriented perspective which forms and informs American empire’s
economic and political plans. The novel also invites readers to engage in a productive
process of self-interrogation by considering one’s standing in conversations on empathy.
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