Care Ethics and the Refugee Crisis: Emotions, Contestation, and Agency

Author: Marcia Morgan
Year of Publication: 2020
Print Length: 204 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Philosophy, Migration & Refugee Studies
Topic: Ethics & Morality, Refugees & Forced Migration, Aesthetic, Care, Emotions, Suffering, Justice, Imagination, Love, Religion, Us vs Them, Othering & Otherness; Self-Determination, Autonomy, Agency; Xenophobia
This book advocates for the philosophical import of care in re-evaluating problems of humanitarianism in the context of the ongoing international refugee and forced migration situation. In doing so, it rethinks the human capacity to care about the suffering of distant others.
At a time when emotional resources are running low, there is a need to recast what it means to care, with the aim of generating a productive movement against the rise of value fundamentalism globally—embraced in mantras of ‘good and evil’ and ‘us and them’—and to confront xenophobia and oppressive politics. The author draws upon a wide array of rich traditions, including historical and contemporary writings on self-care and care of the other, to re-examine the intersection of care ethics and justice. She also rethinks the relationship between care and contestation, here analyzed in the aesthetic, ethical, political, and religious domains of human experience. From within the context of this contingent historical repetition of political oppression, the book constructs a reminder not only of what it feels like to care, but how and why we should act upon our care.
Care Ethics and the Refugee Crisis is an important contribution to the growing literatures on care ethics and immigration/forced migration in philosophy. It will also appeal to scholars and advanced students working in other disciplines such as political science, refugee and migration studies, and social anthropology.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Contextualizing the Problem: Rethinking Care Beyond Good and Evil
2. Aesthetic Care: Witnessing the Muteness of Human Suffering
3. From the Aesthetic to the Ethical: Self-Care and Care of the Other as Contestation
4. From Care Ethics to Political Care: Dependency, Misidentification, and Justice
5. Affective Rejoinders: Reconsidering the Role of Emotions and Imagination in Political Care
6. Contestatory Care as Love: Toward an Understanding of Religious Care
Bibliography
Index

Marcia Morgan is Professor of Philosophy at Muhlenberg College since 2009. Her teaching, research, and college service focus on themes in ethics (including applied ethics), social and political philosophy, and aesthetics. She has served as director of two academic programs and in additional roles as program director of the Center for Ethics, assistant director and co-director of the Faculty Center for Teaching, and director of the Dana Forum honors research program. She has previously taught as Lecturer at Bryn Mawr College, Teaching Fellow at Lang College of The New School, and as Lecturer at Potsdam University in Germany, and has served as guest professor in the masters program in philosophy and art at Stony Brook University as well as the Erasmus Mundus masters program in German and French Philosophy at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. She recently published a sole-authored monograph on Care Ethics and the Refugee Crisis: Emotions, Contestation, and Agency (Routledge, 2020), reviewed in Review of Politics (Cambridge University Press) and PhilPapers, and discussed in the Journal of Refugee Studies (Oxford University Press).
Source: https://wgsi.utoronto.ca/person/robyn-maynard/
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