<p>Does suffering have meaning? The leading scholars and practitioners in <i>Meaningless Suffering</i> engage with this haunting human question through the lenses of psychoanalytic, phenomenological and ethical discourse, all the while holding contemporary social concerns in full view. </p><p>The authors seek to find ways of speaking about the lived realities and historical moments that make up our social narratives ¿ from the murder of George Floyd to the bird watching incident in Central Park ¿ in order to render visible the entangled forms of the effects of embodiment, ideology, race, social practice, and intersectionality. <i>Meaningless Suffering</i> is bookended by powerful pieces by Mari Ruti and Homi K. Bhabha and, in the intervening chapters, the reader traverses the ideas of Augustine, Judith Butler, Fanon, Foucault, Freud, Gendlin, Heidegger, Lacan, Levinas, and Wittgenstein to pass through the realms of classical thought, affect theory, phenomenology, linguistic studies,