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E-grāmata: Everyday Friendships: Intimacy as Freedom in a Complex World

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Everyday Friendship conceptualises the lived experience of intimacy in a world in which the terms and conditions of love and friendship are increasingly unclear. Drawing on writing on friendship, love, and intimacy by such thinkers as Simmel and Kracauer, Elias, Goffman, Luhmann and Honneth, the book charts the modern meaning of intimacy and the freedoms it offers, as well as the continued challenges of entrenched gendered assumptions in everyday relations of affection, trust and respect. It shows that the analysis of the small world of dyads can give important clues about society, and in this case about its gendered makeup. Everyday Friendship seeks to reintegrate into sociology the study of friendship and the analysis of dyads.
List of Tables
ix
Series Editor's Preface x
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction 1(3)
Structure of the book 4(6)
1 Modernity, Intimacy, and Friendship
10(21)
The modern experience, public and private
11(5)
Friendship and commercial society revisited
16(6)
Intimacy, recognition, and romanticism
22(7)
Conclusion
29(2)
2 Friends, Friendship, and Sociology
31(34)
Sensitizing concepts: social relationships, dyads, friendship
33(13)
Differentiating friendship from friendly relations
46(10)
Semantic conflation and contemporary complexities
56(6)
Conclusion
62(3)
3 Love, Friendship, and Freedom
65(30)
Love, friendship, and the problem of institution
66(3)
Love and friendship: selective history of a relationship
69(10)
Friendship's institutional deficit as relational freedom
79(4)
Friendship's relational freedom
83(6)
Relational freedom as resistance: friendship and therapy culture
89(4)
Conclusion
93(2)
4 Friendship, Intimacy, and the Self
95(32)
Intimacy, modernity, and the need for coherence
96(7)
Generativity: becoming together
103(14)
Friendship between the public and the private
117(8)
Conclusion
125(2)
5 Gender and the Love--Friendship Paradox
127(20)
Gender and heterosexuality
129(6)
Homosociality, heterosociality, and social judgment
135(10)
Conclusion
145(2)
6 The Love--Friendship Paradox and Cross-sex Friendship
147(27)
The problem of cross-sex friendship
147(4)
Contemporary challenges to cross-sex friendship
151(16)
Friends with benefits and erotic friendship
167(5)
Conclusion
172(2)
Conclusion: Friendship's Embedded Freedom
174(18)
Love revisited
179(3)
Nonheterosexual friendships and heteronormativity
182(2)
Friendship and sociology
184(4)
Friendship and 'the decent society'
188(4)
Notes 192(7)
References 199(16)
Index 215
Harry Blatterer is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Macquarie University, Australia. His previous book publications include Coming of Age in Times of Uncertainty (2009), and Modern Privacy: Shifting Boundaries, New Forms (2010), co-edited with Maria Markus and Pauline Johnson.