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Doing Good, Being Good, and the Social Construction of Compassion
Amy Blackstone
University of Maine
Activists and volunteers in the United States face the dilemma of having to negotiate the ideals of American individualism with their own acts of compassion. In this article, I consider how activists and volunteers socially construct compassion. Data from ethnographic research in the breast cancer and antirape movements are analyzed. The processes through which compassion is constructed are revealed in participants' actions and in their identities. It is through their actions (or "doing good") and their perceptions and presentations of themselves ("being good") that participants construct compassion as a gendered phenomenon. Together, the processes of doing good and being good raise questions about the extent to which participants' acts of compassion are or can be transformative in a way that promotes the social change which activists and volunteers seek.
Key Words: civic engagement activism gender ethnography
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Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol. 38, No. 1,
85-116 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0891241607310864

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