ISBN:
9781317621492
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (227 pages)
Series Statement:
Routledge Advances in Sociology
Series Statement:
Routledge Studies in the Sociology of Emotions Ser.
Parallel Title:
Print version Seebach, Swen Love and Society : Special Social Forms and the Master Emotion
DDC:
302.3
Keywords:
Love-Social aspects
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- I.1 1655 -- I.2 1894 -- I.3 2013 -- Part I An idea of love -- 1 On love: between a social bond and an emotion -- 1.1 Framing love? -- 1.2 The whys and why-nots of critical theory and feminist analysis in order to define and work with love -- 1.3 Love in our words -- 1.4 The triangular theory of love -- 1.5 Niklas Luhmann on love and intimacy -- 1.6 Would Luhmann consider love as an emotion? -- 1.7 Beck/Beck-Gernsheim -- 1.8 Pulling different strings together: Eva Illouz -- 1.9 A brief review: a first balance -- 2 Love as a second-order form -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Love as an emotion and as a social bond -- 2.3 On second-order forms: what is a second-order form? -- 2.4 Could love be a form of the second order? -- 2.5 From love as an emotion to love as a second-order form -- 2.6 The conditions for love as a second-order form: on the changing nature of society and its forms and apriorities -- 2.7 A brief review: a second balance -- Part II A myth of love -- 3 Why and how could love become the predominant form of the second order? -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 From the crisis before to the crisis after first modernity: why was love able to become a second-order form? -- 3.3 The changes of the three apriorities during the next modernity crisis -- 3.4 On gratitude and faithfulness -- 3.5 Western trajectory to modernity and second-order forms -- 3.6 A brief review: a third balance -- 4 How did love become the predominant form of the second order? -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 From faithfulness to love and back: first steps in a history of love -- 4.3 Towards the time of love -- 4.4 Becoming a second-order form: love in modernity -- 4.5 A brief review: a fourth balance -- Part III An experience of love
Abstract:
5 On rituals of the second order, second-order myths and love rituals as a special version -- 5.1 From rituals to second-order form rituals -- 5.2 What are rituals? -- 5.3 From rituals of gratitude to rituals of faithfulness and beyond -- 5.4 From rituals of faithfulness to rituals of authenticity and rituals of love -- 5.5 Closing the circle: on myths, forms of the second order - and back to ritual -- 5.6 Late modern myths of the forms of the second order: myths of love -- 5.7 Rituals of match-making vs. rituals of love -- 5.8 A brief review: a fifth balance -- 6 Love: enchanting master emotion and durability-providing form -- 6.1 Love, love rituals and its different phases -- 6.2 We feel love, therefore we are committed -- 6.3 Love rituals, love myths -- 6.4 Towards a morality of love -- 6.5 A brief review: a sixth balance -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index
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