Beyond the Empathy Trap

Cultivating Freedom and Solidarity in an Ethic of Care

Peter Capretto

Pages: 256

Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

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Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9781531515393
Published: 01 December 2026
$30.00
Available to order on 03 August 2026
Hardback
ISBN: 9781531515386
Published: 01 December 2026
$105.00
Available to order on 03 August 2026

A radical rethinking of empathy’s role in light of its weaponization

Justice-motivated caregivers have long viewed empathy as a central tool for addressing political division, intergenerational trauma, racism, sexism, and even evil itself. However, social theorists and scholars of religion who study the political behavior of evangelical and protestant Christians are noting new and unexpected limits for the ethics of empathy. How does one empathize with those who explicitly refuse to reciprocate empathy, who weaponize power imbalances for harmful political ends, and who dismiss all invitations to accountability as acts of intolerance? If working toward justice is what matters most, then these efforts to empathize may actually backfire against practices of political solidarity. There must a better way to work through these potential traps and work more effectively toward justice and healing.

Beyond the Empathy Trap explains why empathy limits interpersonal ethics and how justice-motivated caregivers can better prioritize their psychological investments within their work. Drawing deeply from psychoanalysis, phenomenology, philosophy of religion, and pastoral theology, Peter Capretto argues that while empathy remains an essential resource for many forms of social healing, empathy also reaches unavoidable impasses when social injustice targets identity itself. By translating insights from the psychology of religion into high-stakes conflict settings, Capretto’s analysis offers the practical payoff of unmasking how political actors with asymmetric power relations frequently exploit the idea of empathic reciprocity as a trap to disarm caregivers and activists in their practices of solidarity.

Can empathy be misused as a trap and thus subvert, stifle, or outright harm practices of solidarity across identity-based and systemic power differences? In Beyond the Empathy Trap, Peter Capretto makes a passionate case for rethinking our relationship to empathy and its deployment. This book will be important to specialists interested in the failure of empathy to prevent harm –and complicity in harm – in our contemporary moment.—Mindy McGarrah Sharp, author of Listening for Liberation: Sound Practices of Intercultural Spiritual Care

Peter Capretto is Assistant Professor of Psychology, Culture, and Religion at Phillips Theological Seminary. He is co-editor of Trauma and Transcendence: Suffering and the Limits of Theory (Fordham, 2018) and Spiritual Direction and the Other: Interdisciplinary Explorations of Accompaniment (Routledge, 2026).