Home  / 5295

Empathy, holocaust memory, and the Palestine–Israel conflict in British universities

Author(s)

Publication Name

Publication Date

Publication Place

Publisher

Abstract

The recent Israeli onslaught on Gaza has sparked bitter arguments on United Kingdom (UK) university campuses. These conflicts have intertwined with wider disputes over politics, cultural identity, freedom of speech, and also empathy. Both sides routinely accuse their opponents of a lack of empathy with the victims of violence with whom they themselves identify. This chapter sets these arguments, in relation to empathy with suffering in particular, in historical context, extending back to the 1930s. The memory of the Holocaust, and the rise since the 1990s, in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, of a form of empathy-focused Holocaust education, has fed into the politicization and weaponization of empathy in the context of the Middle East conflict. The chapter closes with four practical suggestions, which might help to unblock these unproductive, acrimonious, and emotionally charged disputes on British campuses.

Topics

Editor

Genre

Geographic Coverage

Copyright Info

This is an open access work distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Original Language

Page Number / Article Number

126–138

DOI

Bibliographic Information

Sutcliffe, Adam Empathy, holocaust memory, and the Palestine–Israel conflict in British universities. How to Develop Free Speech on Campus: International Controversies and Communities of Inquiry. Edward Elgar Publishing. 2025: 126–138.  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.4337/9781035342129.00020