Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Suffering: A Sociological Introduction

305

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0

References

2007

Year

TLDR

Sociology traditionally examines causes and consequences of suffering, yet it lacks a dedicated sociology of suffering. This book argues that sociology must attend to suffering to fully account for human experience, confronting unsettling questions of meaning and morality. The book explores how sensitivity to suffering relates to a new politics of compassion in modern societies. The author claims that the perceived senselessness of suffering can dramatically transform how we relate to society and ourselves.

Abstract

Sociology is always concerned with the causes and consequences of human suffering in one form or another, yet there is no sociology of suffering per se. This book is written with the understanding that if sociology fails to attend to what suffering does to people then it is left with a severely diminished account of human experience. Wilkinson maintains that a sociological response to suffering must confront the most unsettling questions of meaning and morality. He argues that the apparent 'senselessness' of suffering has the power to transform dramatically the ways we relate to society and ourselves. The book explores some of the ways in which our sensitivity towards this 'problem of suffering' is related to a new 'politics of compassion' in modern societies.