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Negative Empathy in Literature and the Arts explores how readers and viewers engage cognitively and affectively with ethically troubling artworks across literature, the visual and performing arts, and screen media. Drawing on aesthetics, cultural history and theory, psychology, and neuroscience, Stefano Ercolino and Massimo Fusillo introduce the concept of "negative empathy" to describe the ambivalent and destabilizing emotional responses elicited by representations of negativity in art. Rather than dismissing empathy as naïve, the authors argue for a more nuanced understanding of its darker forms and their cognitive and ethical value. Through a comparative and intermedial approach, the book analyzes case studies from Littell's
The Kindly Ones to Wilson's
Deafman Glance; from Verdi's
Macbeth and Nitsch's
Theatre of Orgies and Mysteries to Caravaggio's
Martyrdom of Saint Matthew, Mapplethorpe's "
X" Portfolio, Kiefer's
The Seven Heavenly Palaces, Haneke's
The White Ribbon, and Gilligan's
Breaking Bad-offering a compelling new theory of aesthetic engagement.
List of contents
List of Figures
Why Negative Empathy?
Chapter One. History and Theory of an Idea
1. Resonance and Distance
2. Empathetic Suffering
3. Identification, Catharsis,
StimmungChapter Two. Seductions of Rhetoric
1. Inner Torment, Psychological Complexity, Eloquence
2. Brothers in the Night: Jonathan Littell's
The Kindly OnesChapter Three. In the Rhythm of the Scene
1. Tragic Lacerations
1.1 Empathy and Estrangement
1.2 Medea's Theatricality
1.3 Repeating the Abnormal Act: Robert Wilson's
Deafman Glance2. The Force of the Voice
2.1 The Dramaturgy of the Antagonist in Melodrama
2.2 A Broken and Expressionist Song: Giuseppe Verdi's
Macbeth3. Beyond Representation
3.1 Shadowy Actions
3.2 The Ecstasy of Ritual Dismemberment: Hermann Nitsch's
Theater of Orgies and MysteriesChapter Four. Nostalgia and Anguish for Life
1. The Power of Images, the Power of Empathy
2.
Stimmungseinfühlung3. Abstraction vs. Empathy
4. Embodied Vision: Caravaggio's
Martyrdom of St. MatthewChapter Five. The Multiplied Gaze
1. On Medusa's Side
1.1 The Frozen Moment
1.2 Power Games
1.3 Aestheticizing the Extreme: Robert Mapplethorpe's
"X" Portfolio2. Labyrinths of Perception
2.1 Immersive Environments
2.2 Among the Ruins of History: Anselm Kiefer's
Seven Heavenly PalacesChapter Six. Audiovisual Simulations
1. In the Darkness of Their Eyes
1.1 Identifying with Bad People
1.2 Empathizing with a Community: Michael Haneke's
The White Ribbon2. Serial Pleasures
2.1 TV Antiheroes
2.2 Challenging Empathy: Vince Gilligan's
Breaking BadBibliography
Index
About the author
Stefano Ercolino teaches literary theory and comparative literature at Ca' Foscari University of Venice. He is the author of
The Maximalist Novel: From Thomas Pynchon's "Gravity's Rainbow" to Roberto Bolaño's "2666" and
The Novel-Essay, 1884-1947. He co-edited
Imaginary Films in Literature and
Experimental Criticism: Franco Moretti and Literature.Massimo Fusillo teaches comparative literature at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa. He is the author of several books, including
The Fetish: Literature, Cinema, Visual Art. He co-edited
The Gesamtkunstwerk as Synergy of the Arts and Thinking Narratively: Between Novel-Essay and Narrative Essay.