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Editorial: On Love

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Editorial: On Love
Daniela CUTAȘ
Umeå University, University of Gothenburg
daniela.cutas@umu.se
What is love? Is it an uncontrollable emotion? Is it, instead, socially shaped, both an emotion
and a social practice? Can the bonds of care and affection between humans and non-human
animals be said to be on a par with parent-child relationships between humans? Do parents owe
love to their children and do mothers and fathers, respectively, owe it to different degrees? Do
subversive weddings challenge normative ideals about love? What is the significance of love for
the value of close personal or family relationships? All these questions and more are discussed in
the articles included in this special issue. The contributors draw from a variety of disciplines
including philosophy, sociology, political science, religious studies, and history, as well as from
empirical work that they have undertaken in Canada, Belgium, Portugal, or Romania. From these
different perspectives and experiences, each contribution addresses important questions about
love and its relation to sexuality, monogamy, friendship, the family, parenthood, or society in
general.
The theme
From the balance between moral agency and uptake of responsibility for love’s beginning
and its ending (Ciurria 2018), to ambivalence in the face of innovations in ways of looking for
love (Pozsar et al 2018), this special issue explores love and its challenges in the contemporary
world. Several of the contributions address the way in which love has been used to keep women’s
interests subsumed to those of their male partners (Uiorean 2018, Sadler 2018) or those of their
children (Jacobs & Hens 2018, Green 2018). This has often been accomplished with the support
of the expectation that (heterosexual) romantic love is essential for women’s fulfillment. By
placing the nuclear family, created by romantic love, in the center of our adult lives, all other loves
are moved to the sides. Against this background, the authors of the articles included in this special
issue contribute to ‘rehabilitating’ other instantiations of love that are either non-romantic (Gheaus
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2018, Piazzesi et al 2018), non-monogamous (Brake 2018, Clardy 2018), non-heterosexual (Santos
2018), or altogether cross-species (Stewart 2018).
The belief that a heterosexual romantic relationship is essential for human flourishing has a
name, ‘amatonormativity’, coined by philosopher Elizabeth Brake. The term denotes
the assumption that a central, exclusive, amorous relationship is normal for humans, in that it is a
universally shared goal, and that such a relationship is normative, in the sense that it should be
aimed at in preference to other relationship types. The assumption that valuable relationships must
be marital or amorous devalues friendships and other caring relationships. (Brake 2012: 88-89).
Research on friendship between adults confirms the surrender to the social script of the
primacy of the family over friendship that takes place in many adults’ lives. For example, a recent
study of friendship between men in Sweden found that although they valued their friendships
greatly, they felt they had to negotiate partial withdrawals from them once they embarked on a
serious (heterosexual) romantic relationship (Goedecke 2018). Even as it has become socially
acceptable that one will have several romantic partners in one’s lifetime, these are still one’s “other
halves”, “significant others”, or “soulmates” – at least until proven otherwise. Friends, on the other
hand, are not at least not as adults, and even when one has had one enduring close friend for life
and multiple, serial romantic “other halves”.
If the form of elective family that is the romantic relationship has dissolved, the relationship
is said to have “failed” and we were simply mistaken to have started it in the first place: our other
half was not our other half after all. Friendship, on the other hand, tends to lack both this
requirement of exclusivity and the all or nothing approach in relation to its temporality: someone
may no longer be a close friend today, but that in itself need not mean anything about whether the
relationship was “real” friendship when it was ongoing. Romantic love and the family could be
enriched in this way by being more like friendship as Gheaus suggests in this special issue
instead of cutting our intimate relationships to size and emptying them of meaning as soon as they
no longer fit the narrative of the successful romantic relationship.
In a paper published almost three decades ago, psychologist Esther Rothblum invited her
readers to imagine an alternative scenario of a society in which the expectations surrounding
friendship and romantic love are switched (Rothblum 1999). One is only allowed to have one
friend. Friendship is celebrated in Friendship Commitment Ceremonies where the happy couple
invites all their close ones, including lovers and family. While one may have multiple lovers, care
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is warranted to avoid becoming more than “just lovers”. Friendship with others, when you already
have a friend, amounts to cheating and is frowned upon. Fiction and music are sources of countless
examples of happy friendships that all are encouraged to aspire to. Declaring one’s friendship
status is a requirement on a host of official documents. The end of a friendship is a life-changing
event that everyone acknowledges as such.
Rothblum does not suggest that such a scenario be enacted. Instead, she uses it to question
what she calls “the culture of sex” of the Western world, established conventions of what counts
as sex, and current definitions of friendship, especially in relation to coupledom. She calls for a
“friendship revolution”, a reorganization of the way we structure close personal relationships,
which would displace sexual intimacy from center stage, and replace it with friendship. For
Rothblum, this would be particularly beneficial for women, by shattering the expectation that they
should invest in their sexual attractiveness, and instead encouraging them to invest in other ways
of relating such as friendship.
Rothblum is not the only one who has contrasted norms around friendship and romantic love
to reveal contradictions in how we conceptualize love. For example, philosopher Maren Behrensen
discusses the requirement that romantic love is necessarily exclusive by comparing it with
expectations concerning friendship and parental love. Loving several friends or several children
need not subtract from the love that we feel for each friend and each child. While there are limits
to how many people we can love, as friends, lovers, or parents, it is only in the case of romantic
love that the limit is expected to be “1” (Behrensen 2014).
More recently, philosopher Harry Chalmers imagines a couple in which partners have agreed
to exclusivity not only in their romantic relationship, but also in friendship: they will be each
other’s friend, and no one else’s. Violating this expectation, by befriending other people, may bring
about the end of their relationship. This is problematic, argues Chalmers, because friendship is an
important human good, and supporting our beloved in their pursuit of important human goods is
part of what it means to love. However, romantic love is also an important human good. Like
friendship, it contributes meaning to our lives, and connects us with others in intimate ways.
Chalmers’ argument is that the requirement of monogamy in romantic love is morally
impermissible, in the same way in which a requirement of monogamy in friendship is (Chalmers
2018).
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Rothblum, Behrensen, and Chalmers invite us to consider romantic love, and the norms that
surround it, amidst other kinds of love, and the norms that surround them, and to reflect on the
extent to which the norms of romantic love are justifiable. The “friendship revolution” that
Rothblum envisioned is that of a dynamic between friendship, romantic love, and the family, that
diverges from the amatonormative script. A “love revolution”, which renders all loves equal in
value and frees love from the realm of social or personal expectation, seems to be one of the take-
home reflections of this special issue. Love is not exclusive or species-bound, is not owed even
where it is needed, and it does not need to be socially accepted in order to redeem itself.
In the following, I will briefly present the articles included in this special issue.
The articles
In her article, “Love as emotion and social practice”, Brook Sadler shows how society
shapes our views about love in specific directions. The social practice of love and of the
importance of ‘erotic affiliation’, Sadler claims, reveals underlying tensions regarding the place
and the status of women in liberal democracies. Not all or any love is equally valued socially; not
all or any love is supposed to overwhelm us. Romantic love is awarded a special status that pushes
other kinds of love to the margins and relegates them to secondary status in comparison.
Romantic love is not just one of several kinds of love, alongside, for example, love between
close friends. It is, as Sadler puts it, “the defining pursuit of adult life (…) central to individual
identity”. By hiding this expectation behind the portrayal of romantic love as an uncontrollable
emotion, we collectively prevent ourselves from taking responsibility for placing romantic love
on such a high pedestal and for accepting that it is thus elevated. We don’t simply perceive our
emerging feelings directly as they are, but we interpret them with the tools that we have been
given, we translate them using the social language, the shared beliefs, within which we lead our
lives. In that way, love is not only an emotion, but also a social practice, and we share in
responsibility for the ways in which we interpret it.
Justin Clardy looks at how the social meaning of a word (such as ‘player’) is dependent on
the linguistic community in which it is used, in a way that influences its potential to praise or
denigrate. For Carrie Jenkins, writing about the consequences of being labeled promiscuous, there
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is no male equivalent to “slut” in potential to denigrate. ‘Player’ for Jenkins “sounds like somebody
who has a lot of fun” (Jenkins 2017: 139). In African American English, however, “player” denotes
a man who is dishonest and takes advantage of women. This is important in the context of
polyamory - or consensual non-monogamy - because a polyamorous man may not cheat or take
advantage of his partners, but still be labeled a ‘player’.
The label therefore forces a stereotype onto African American polyamorous men, regardless
of whether they actually do display the characteristics imputed to them in this way (such as
dishonesty and manipulation). This is further aggravated by the hyper-sexualization that black men
have been subjected to historically. Because polyamorous men are not dishonest with their
partners, they are not players. Therefore, concludes Clardy, against the background of
amatonormativity, labeling African American polyamorous men as ‘players’ denigrates them and
denies them respectability for their non-monogamous choices.
In Clardy’s paper, we see how amatonormativity can work with race and gender to raise
challenges for African American polyamorous men. In the next paper of this special issue,
Elizabeth Brake looks at whether polyamorous weddings (weddings between more than two
lovers) succeed in challenging the ideals of amatonormativity. Are they even weddings at all? And
if they are weddings, are they a step towards assimilation into the fixed roles of romantic love
ideals, by giving in to a version of amatonormativity? Are they, on the contrary, a step towards the
weakening of the grip that these ideals have upon lovers?
Subversive polyamorous weddings bring forth a challenge to widely socially embraced
ideals of the necessary exclusivity and constancy of romantic love. The specific challenge that
polyamorous weddings raise hits at the core of these ideals, by positing a version of romantic love
that allows multiple parties. Romantic love is supposed to be exclusive between only two parties
but polyamorous weddings welcome more than two; the one lover is supposed to be one’s
irreplaceable soulmate but polyamorous weddings allow for more soulmates. Instead of
symbolizing the uniqueness and irreplaceability that weddings do, polyamorous weddings
celebrate openness to the possibility that one can love romantically more than one. They celebrate
ongoing consent rather than promises that cannot be made: such as that the love one feels today
will always be there, for the same recipient, and only for that person, come what may (see also
Brake 2011, 2012).
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Oana Uiorean discusses Plato’s Symposium, looking at how the sharp distinctions and
hierarchies apparent in the speeches therein are reflected in contemporary gendered roles and
expectations. Awkwardness in relation to women and women’s roles in the reproduction of
mankind seethes throughout the words of Plato’s speakers – and especially those of Pausanias.
In the Symposium, love between men is elevated to no less than celestial realms if
performed properly. Love, and men, aim at higher levels of achievement, while women belong in
the home and their energy is bound to the realm of the reproduction of society and its citizens.
Uiorean shows how, while Plato’s ideal of homoerotic love has been replaced with the ideal of
heterosexual love, the latter perpetuates the same function of gendering the domestic sphere and
disciplining women in well-defined roles.
Against the quintessentially contemporary background of neuroscience, Delphine Jacobs
and Kristien Hens illustrate the expectations that women owe duties of love to their family
members, by looking into the scientific claim that parents, and especially mothers, owe love to
their children. This claim is informed by biology and neurology research according to which love
is essential for children’s adequate brain development. Responsibility for providing this love is
placed on the parents, and especially on the mother.
Jacobs and Hens use their research on the diagnosis of autism to explore the road from
blaming mothers for their children’s non-typical neurological development, to lifting that blame,
only to then blame them again. Even as it exculpates parents from the blame of not having
parented well enough, the neurological diagnosis of a child compounds the pressure put on parents
to love their children in the right way. In order for the endeavor to support children in their
development to work, a less simplistic view of biology is required, Jacobs and Hens argue. Not
least, a broader view of moral responsibility for children as more than parental or maternal as
well as a less reductionist understanding of love, are also required.
Deidre Green emphasizes some of the contradictions of conceptualizing maternal love as
something that children have a right to. Not only is love not the kind of response that can be
claimed of someone, but the imposition of such a claim is a threat to women’s very agency. While
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children do have legitimate claims on their parents, which include a claim to a mother’s care,
responsibility, and respect, love itself is not one of them.
Instead, Green develops an account of maternal love as a gift. The gift framework, Green
shows, avoids the subordination of women’s interests and agency to those of their children.
Moreover, it allows greater agency for both the mother and the child.
Michelle Ciurria contrasts our attitudes to falling in love and to romantic break-ups,
respectively. While both experiences share essential properties, such as a lack of control and of
psychological continuity, we are more inclined to take responsibility for, and to feel in control of,
falling in love, than breaking-up. This is in line with an asymmetry in the perception of
responsibility that is common in neurotypical people: we tend to feel more responsible for positive
than for negative events (such as falling in love, and breaking up, respectively). This tendency for
“self-serving bias”, Ciurria shows, has benefits for human functioning.
Some of us, however, feel more responsible for negative events than for positive events.
Depression, for example, tends to make us prone to take on too much responsibility for negative
events, in a way that impairs our functioning. Others see themselves as the cause of only good
things (such as positive romantic experiences) and fail to admit responsibility for negative events
(such as romantic break-ups) to such a degree that they are unable to relate to others: they are
narcissists. From the perspective of the moral enhancement theory of responsibility, which Ciurria
employs in the article, we need to support each other to care and to take responsibility where it is
due: but only to the extent that it allows us to maintain or improve our moral agency.
In “Love, not the family”, Anca Gheaus makes the radical claim that what is most valuable
in family relations is love. The family, however, has no monopoly on love. Throughout the
Western world, it is expected that adults will privilege the family; that family brings obligations
in private life that close personal relationships (such as friendship) do not. For example, children
are born or brought into family relationships to which they cannot consent, either because they
didn’t exist, or because, in the case of adoption, they were too young to do so1. Social expectations
1 In a minority of cases, children are adopted at older ages and their consent is sought. The degree to which this consent
is free is however doubtful, considering that the choice may be between having a home and a family and not having
them. Even if older children are deemed to have capacity to consent, all the conditions of informed consent, especially
those regarding the decision being free, are not met, because of the vulnerability presupposed by their very
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or legal provisions that, as adults, they care for their parents, and the expectation that they show
some degree of unconditional partiality towards other relatives, capture the assumption that they
are bound for life to family relationships.
The high standard of commitment expected from family relationships may compromise
moral integrity, argues Gheaus especially when one is expected to stay close to family members,
regardless of whether they are people we would otherwise want to be close with and may be
detrimental to human flourishing. Commitments that originate in love, however, such as those
between close friends, derive from the relationship, rather than from external constraints. Rather
than placing the family and its constraints in the center, Gheaus places love and friendship: it is
loving friendship, rather than family, that should be at the core of our closest personal relationships,
whether with friends or with family members.
Another prospect of a realignment between friendship and romantic love is presented in the
next article. Chiara Piazessi, Martin Blais, Julia Lavigne and Catherine Lavoie Mongrain analyse
the interplay between “love semantics”, or the narrative of love, and changing social norms. They
do so by focusing on the tribulations of four fictional women as they are depicted in a North-
American TV series, La Galère. This case study does not lend itself smoothly to the dichotomies
“traditional vs modern” and “romantic vs partnership” – as one might expect, in line with literature
on contemporary love paradigms. Instead, it reveals an integration between all these elements, as
the four protagonists of the series navigate societal norms and expectations in relation to women
and their experience of love, intimacy, gender identity, and power relationships.
The women disrupt the romantic script (for example, by sharing a home together rather than
with their male partners), while they seek certain parts of it (for example, passionate love). Faced
with the difficulties of sharing mundane household tasks while keeping the relationship passionate,
they rearrange their intimate relationships in a way more likely to allow them both equality in the
home, and passion in their romantic connections. This disconnects household-related expectations
from the romantic relationship, relegates the home to friendship, and from this altered starting
point re-opens negotiation within the romantic relationship. La Galère, the authors suggest,
circumstances. The consent that adults give to entering or remaining in an intimate relationship with other adults can
likewise be vitiated by a lack of freedom, caused for example by poverty or social pressure.
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illustrates both women’ reflexivity in facing the challenges of romantic love, and the supportive
potential of friendship between women.
Access to assisted reproductive technologies by same-sex female couples and single
women is far from guaranteed throughout Europe. In France and Italy, for example, only
heterosexual couples are allowed to avail themselves of such treatments. In Romania, access by
single women is frowned upon, and not included in state funded programs. Where funding exists,
it is reserved for heterosexual couples. Parenting by same-sex partners is not recognized in
Romanian law. In theory, what explains these restrictions is the way in which infertility is defined
in most legislatures, as the failure of a heterosexual couple to produce children via sexual
intercourse. In this way, same-sex couples and single individuals are defined away at the outset
as not suffering from the disease of infertility, and are thus excluded by default.
In Portugal, same-sex female couples have had access to reproductive technologies since
2016, and Ana Santos illustrates some of the outcomes and pitfalls of these legislative changes.
She does so against the background of “the motherhood regime”, the expectation that women
become mothers and perform motherhood in a socially sanctioned way. For the women she
interviewed, this has opened up not only possibilities to seek support in becoming mothers, but
also to experience societal expectations of what good motherhood is. Santos shows how, upon the
removal of barriers to reproductive technologies, the effects of the insidious social expectation
that sexuality is redeemed by reproduction contribute to render same-sex female couples
acceptable because they become mothers. At the same time, by embarking on this journey, they
cannot but disrupt norms about parenthood. For Santos, this disruption is a call for “decolonizing
motherhood” by queering reproduction and parental love.
There is a growing amount of research into the use of mobile dating apps. However, most
of this research is undertaken in a Western context. Maria Pozsar, Alina Dumitrescu, Denisa
Piticas and Sorana Constantinescu investigate the perceptions of Romanian young women having
used such apps. Romanian youth tend to be more conservative than their Western counterparts
and sometimes than their own parents and ambivalent as to the appropriateness of online dating.
This ambivalence is apparent throughout the study. The authors explored the disruptive
potential of these apps in relation to traditional forms of dating. They found that the users of the
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apps tended to be both less conservative than the general population in their age group, and
conflicted between their adherence to conservative values and their own negative perception of
the very use of such apps.
The last article of the special issue goes beyond love between humans, to investigate the
nature of the relationships between humans and their non-human companions specifically cats
and dogs. Although human knowledge of non-human lives has made tremendous progress in recent
years, in ways that have influenced how one is permitted to treat animals, Heather Stewart claims
that the revision of human-animal relationships has not gone far enough. Her argument is that the
relation between the human caregiver and their ‘pet’ shares many of the essential properties of
parent-child relationships, to such an extent that we should reconceptualize them as parental rather
than proprietary in nature.
Indeed, the status quo is that human caregivers are their pets’ “owners”. In Romanian, they
are their pets’ “masters” (stăpâni). This is at odds with the increasing social and legal recognition
of animals’ moral status. Stewart’s proposal departs from this status quo. It invites the readers to
reflect on the meaning and reasoning behind kinds of recognition of inter-species caring
relationships, and to consider the benefits for both human carers and non-human companions of
recognizing their relationship as a form of parenthood.
The above is only a brief review of the contributions included in this special issue on
Analyzing Love. I hope to have provided enough of a glimpse into the work of the authors to
stimulate the readers to look more closely at the articles themselves. The breath of the approaches
represented in this special issue will have something to offer to any reader who is interested in
reflecting on how love works in our societies.
Acknowledgment: I would like to thank all the authors for their contributions and for their patience
with the reviewing process. I also thank our reviewers, whose feedback supported the authors in
fine-tuning and finalizing their manuscripts, and the journal Analize, for instigating the project and
providing it with a home. My own work towards this special issue has been supported by the
Swedish Research Council (grant number 421-2013-1306).
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Article
Even in secular contexts, marriage retains sacramental connotations. Yet what is its moral significance? This book examines its morally salient features - promise, commitment, care, and contract - with surprising results. In Part One, "De-Moralizing Marriage," essays on promise and commitment argue that we cannot promise to love and so wedding vows are (mostly) failed promises, and that marriage may be a poor commitment strategy. The book contends with philosophical defenses of marriage to argue that marriage has no inherent moral significance. Further, privileging marriage sustains amatonormative discrimination - discrimination against non-amorous or non-exclusive caring relationships such as friendships, adult care networks, or polyamorous groups. The discussion raises issues of independent interest for the moral philosopher such as the limits of promising and nature of commitment. The central argument of Part Two, "Democratizing Marriage," is that liberal reasons for recognizing same-sex marriage also require recognition of polyamorists, polygamists, friends, urban tribes, and adult care networks. Political liberalism requires the disestablishment of monogamous amatonormative marriage. Under public reason, a liberal state must refrain from basing law solely on moral or religious doctrines; but only such doctrines could furnish reason for restricting marriage to male-female couples or romantic dyads. Restrictions on marriage should be minimized. But there is a strong rationale for minimal marriage: social supports for care are a matter of fundamental justice. Part Two responds to challenges posed by property division, polygyny, and parenting, builds on feminist, queer, and anti-racist critiques of marriage, and argues for the compatibility of liberalism and feminism.
Article
Wedding vows seem to be promises. So they go: “I promise to love, honour, and cherish ....” But this poses a problem. Divorce is not widely seen as a serious moral wrong, but breaking a promise is. I first consider, and defend against preliminary objections, a ‘hard-line’ response: divorce is indeed prima facie impermissible promise-breaking. I next consider the ‘hardship’ response—the hardship of failed marriages overrides the prima facie duty to keep promises. However, this would release promisors in far too many cases. I resolve the triad by considering the content of the vows. Vows concerning love are not promises at all. We cannot promise to do acts the performance of which is outside our control, and love involves states of mind outside our control. Vows concerning spousal roles are complicated by diverse social understandings of marriage and the centrality of emotion to the roles. KeywordsMarriage–Divorce–Promises–Ethics–Love
Is Monogamy Morally Permissible
  • Harry Chalmers
Chalmers, Harry. Is Monogamy Morally Permissible? Journal of Value Inquiry 2018; online first, September 28, available at https://doi-org.proxy.ub.umu.se/10.1007/s10790-018-9663-8 (last accessed December 2018).
Other Guys Don't Hang Out Like This
  • Klara Goedecke
Goedecke, Klara. "Other Guys Don't Hang Out Like This": Gendered Friendship Politics among Swedish, Middle-Class Men. Uppsala: Uppsala University, 2018.
What Love Is: And What It Could Be
  • Carrie Jenkins
Jenkins, Carrie. What Love Is: And What It Could Be. New York: Basic Books, 2017. Rothblum, Esther. Poly-Friendships. Journal of Lesbian Studies 1999; 3; ½: 71-83.