Abstract
This article examines the role that empathy played during the US intervention in
the Lebanese civil war of 1958, also known as Operation Blue Bat. Through deep
readings of public texts, it explores how a minority of Americans empathized
with Lebanese opponents of President Camille Chamoun. After the arrival of US
forces, Lebanese anti-Chamounists made their voices heard and feeling felt in
the USA via global information providers, enacting cultural interventions.
Lebanese dissent was headline news, engendering empathetic processes that
reoriented US ways of feeling, thinking, and acting. By using empathy as a point
of entry into historical intercultural relations, this article unearths how
genuine transnational understandings were socially formed during a moment of
conflict. Ultimately, it argues that a focus on empathy gives foreign relations
scholars an avenue that eschews nefarious Orientalist binaries
and their powers in the process.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Cultural Studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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