Are we hard-wired to feel other people’s pain? And if so, is it necessarily a good thing? Andrew Scull has reviewed three new books on empathy and joins us to tell us more; Charles Dickens's love of all things theatrical – in life as in art – is no secret. Robert Douglas-Fairhurst considers fifty years' worth of Dickens adaptations for the stage (and film)
Books
The Empathy Instinct by Peter Bazalgette
Against Empathy: The case for rational compassion by Paul Bloom
The Invention of Humanity: Equality and cultural difference in world history by Siep Stuurman
Dickensian Dramas: Plays from Charles Dickens (Volume One, edited by Jacky Bratton; Volume Two, edited by Jim Davis
To The Barricades
All The News That’s Fit To Print
Every Little Helps
To Thine Own Self Be True
Everyone’s Business
How To Respect A Chihuahua’s Privacy
Look Back In Anger
A Place of Greater Safety
So Long, Farewell
Connecting the Dots
Searching for the Good Life
Disrupting the Narrative
Mother Knows Best
Always Look On The Bright Side of Life
Scratch The Surface
Private Faces In Public Places
In A Green Shade
American Paranoia
The Isle is Full of Noises
Turning Leaves
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