"At a time of increasing intolerance and widespread political challenges centred on immigration, Roger Kennedy’s thoughtful approach and psychoanalytic expertise make a timely contribution to understanding how learning to live with strangers is difficult, necessary, and ultimately rewarding. Kennedy draws on a wide range of disciplines from Shakespeare studies to sociology, politics, and music to make the case for proposing a pluralistic framework for tolerance that should help to inform private thinking and public discourse."-Armand D’Angour, Associate Professor in Classics, University of Oxford, UK
"This very timely book shows the contribution — much needed — that psychoanalysis can make to the discussion of social and political issues. It could only have been written by a psychoanalyst with a deep interest in the history of ideas. Kennedy considers how notions of tolerance and intolerance have been understood at different times. Contemporary views derive from the Enlightenment, with its focus on rationality, and Kennedy emphasises that arguments based on reason alone can never resolve conflicts in this area. His concepts of ‘subject tolerance’ and ‘object tolerance’ are especially valuable."-Michael Parsons, British Psychoanalytical Society
"At a time of increasing intolerance and widespread political challenges centred on immigration, Roger Kennedy’s thoughtful approach and psychoanalytic expertise make a timely contribution to understanding how learning to live with strangers is difficult, necessary, and ultimately rewarding. Kennedy draws on a wide range of disciplines from Shakespeare studies to sociology, politics, and music to make the case for proposing a pluralistic framework for tolerance that should help to inform private thinking and public discourse."
Armand D’Angour, Associate Professor in Classics, University of Oxford, UK
"This very timely book shows the contribution — much needed — that psychoanalysis can make to the discussion of social and political issues. It could only have been written by a psychoanalyst with a deep interest in the history of ideas. Kennedy considers how notions of tolerance and intolerance have been understood at different times. Contemporary views derive from the Enlightenment, with its focus on rationality, and Kennedy emphasises that arguments based on reason alone can never resolve conflicts in this area. His concepts of ‘subject tolerance’ and ‘object tolerance’ are especially valuable."
Michael Parsons, British Psychoanalytical Society