https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/empathy-emotion-and-experience/202006/race-empathy-and-the-white-psyche
The Politics of Empathy and Race
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/empathy-emotion-and-experience/202002/the-politics-empathy-and-race
The Opposite of Empathy
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/empathy-emotion-and-experience/201912/the-opposite-empathy
Empathy’s Paradox
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/empathy-emotion-and-experience/201912/empathys-paradox
The Surprising History of Empathy
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/empathy-emotion-and-experience/201911/the-surprising-history-empathy
Empathy and Race in the Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2019/02/22/why-empathy-is-key-dismantling-white-racism/?utm_term=.661bbee89921
Radio Interview: WCAI NPR for Cape, Coast and the Islands
http://www.capeandislands.org/post/history-empathy#stream/0
YUP Blog on the Origin of Empathy
BYU Radio Interview: Check it Out!
Empathy: A History
SEPTEMBER 25, 2018
Purchase: Yale Books | Amazon
A surprising, sweeping, and deeply researched history of empathy—from late-nineteenth-century German aesthetics to mirror neurons.
Empathy: A History tells the fascinating and largely unknown story of the first appearance of “empathy” in 1908 and tracks its shifting meanings over the following century. Despite empathy’s ubiquity today, few realize that it began as a translation of Einfühlung or “in-feeling” in German psychological aesthetics that described how spectators projected their own feelings and movements into objects of art and nature.
Remarkably, this early conception of empathy transformed into its opposite over the ensuing decades. Social scientists and clinical psychologists refashioned empathy to require the deliberate putting aside of one’s feelings to more accurately understand another’s. By the end of World War II, interpersonal empathy entered the mainstream, appearing in advice columns, popular radio and TV, and later in public forums on civil rights. Even as neuroscientists continue to map the brain correlates of empathy, its many dimensions still elude strict scientific description.
This meticulously researched book uncovers empathy’s historical layers, offering a rich portrait of the tension between the reach of one’s own imagination and the realities of others’ experiences.