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Chapter 6: Love and Loving

Chapter 6: Love and Loving. Love is a Cultural Experience. Collectivist Cultures Goals of whole society are given priority over individual goals Members strive to be equal Behavior is driven by sense of obligation and duty Latinos value interdependent relationships

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Chapter 6: Love and Loving

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  1. Chapter 6: Love and Loving

  2. Love is a Cultural Experience • Collectivist Cultures • Goals of whole society are given priority over individual goals • Members strive to be equal • Behavior is driven by sense of obligation and duty • Latinos value interdependent relationships • Asians emphasize importance of collective whole

  3. Love is a Cultural Experience • Individualist Cultures • Individual goals are promoted over group goals • People define their identity by personal attributes • Wealth • Social status • Education level • Promote the idea of autonomy and individuation

  4. History of Love and Romance • Ancient History • Examples of love and romance • Adam and Eve • Gilgamesh – 2000 BCE • King Solomon – 970 BCE • Account of love and romance between bride and groom • Greeks – 450 BCE • Love was bittersweet emotion

  5. History of Love and Romance • Middle Ages and Renaissance • True era of romance, courtship • 16th century love viewed as physical union • Coming to America • Puritans were romantic lovers • Expected sex within marriage

  6. History of Love and Romance Back in Europe • Victorian Era (1837-1901) • Attitudes towards sexuality were stuffy • Ideal of love promoted couple togetherness • Romantic Love • 20th century saw social change • Emancipation of women • Romantic attraction became accepted

  7. What is love? • Greek definitions • Eros: sexual, physical components • Philos: brotherly love • Agape: self sacrificing, spiritual

  8. What is love? • Love as a prototype – Beverley Fehr • Prototype is a model • Twelve central features of love • Love maps – John Money • Present an ideal image of love • Shaped by experiences in infancy and childhood

  9. Table 6.1: Fehr’s Twelve Central Features of Love

  10. What is love? • Passionate love • Infatuation: intense, extravagant, short-lived passion for the other person • Simple infatuation: a physical attraction • Infatuation as Romance • Romantic infatuation: romantic love • Foolish, unreasoning passionate attraction

  11. What is love? • Passionate love • Intense longing for the selected love object • Emotional manifestations • Idealizing the romantic partner • Intense sexual attraction • Surge of self confidence • Adoration of the love interest • Fatuous relationships end as quickly as they began

  12. Table 6.2: The Passionate Love Scale

  13. What is love? • Infatuation as Limerence • Similar to romantic love • Intrusive thoughts about love object • “Love sick” • Symptoms • Longing for reciprocation • Aching for the limerent object • Intense emotions

  14. What is love? When limerence ends – three possibilities • Consummation • Feelings have been reciprocated or there is mutual, lasting love • Starvation • Limerence is starved out of existence • Transformation • Limerence is transferred to new object

  15. Companionate Love • Deep, mature, affectionate attachment bonds • Less dominated by lust • Develops over time • Partners accept all of the failing, faults, shortcomings, etc • Liking – necessary ingredient

  16. Expression of Love Triangular theory of love – Sternberg 8 different types of love relationships Love relationships consist of: • Passion • Intimacy • Commitment

  17. Figure 7.1: Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love

  18. Expression of Love • Intimacy • Feelings of closeness • Connectedness • Bondedness • Self-disclosure • Respect • Trust • Builds slowly over time

  19. Expression of Love Commitment • Loving another person and making a conscious decision to maintain that love over time • A deliberate choice • Being loyal to another individual

  20. Expression of Love • Passion • Physical attraction • Romantic feelings • Most intense and immediate component • Sexual consummation

  21. Figure 6.2: Sternberg’s Love Types

  22. Sternberg’s Eight Love Types • Nonlove – absence of intimacy, commitment and passion • Empty love – void of passion and intimacy, commitment is the only element • Liking – intimacy is the sole element in this type, no passion or commitment • Infatuated love – consists of passion only, idealized love, relationships begin and end quickly

  23. Sternberg’s Eight Love Types • Companionate love – combines intimacy and commitment, intimacy builds • Fatuous love – combines passion and commitment, relationship lacks intimacy • Romantic love – intimacy and passion with sexual attraction and arousal • Consummate love – combines all three elements of love-intimacy, commitment and passion

  24. Developing Love – First Experience • Altruistic love – love parents give their child, promotes the well being of one with no expectation of reciprocity • Intrinsic rewards – joy, satisfaction, contentment, pleasure, gratification

  25. Reciprocity and Love • Interdependent love – love is a give and take process, requires give and take and changes over time • Attachment – emotional bond that binds a child to the parent, begins in infancy and influences personality

  26. Attachment Types • Secure attachment – maintain close relationships with one another • Avoidant attachment – seldom find real love, uncomfortable when too emotionally or physically close to another person • Anxious/Ambivalent attachment – insecure, constantly afraid partner doesn’t love them

  27. The Genogram • Used to understand the transmission of relational behaviors from one generation to the next • Diagrams with various figures are used to illustrate relationships between family members

  28. Figure 6.4A: Basic Genogram Symbols

  29. Figure 6.4B Genogram Symbols for Relationship Dynamics

  30. Lee’s Six Types of Love Styles • Eros – erotic lovers are passionate and romantic and seek out passionately expressive lovers • Ludus – playful, carefree and casual lovers who do not care as much about commitment as they do about playing the game of love

  31. Lee’s Six Types of Love Styles • Storge – love that is based on friendship or affection between friends, love grows over time • Manic – jealous lovers, everything is in chaos, highs are high and lows are low, relationships are like a roller coaster ride

  32. Lee’s Six Types of Love Styles • Pragma – pragmatic, weigh the costs and benefits of the relationship • Agape – selfless, enduring, other-centered love, provides intrinsic satisfaction without reciprocity

  33. Reiss’s Wheel Theory of Love Four Processes 1. rapport – establish rapport, usually with someone like us 2. self-revelation – self-disclosure about goals and dreams 3. mutual dependency – relationship deepens, and couple relies on one another 4. Personality need fulfillment – established pattern of exchange and support

  34. Figure 6.5 Reiss’s Wheel Theory of Love

  35. Love Economic Model • Based on the assumption that people are rational decision makers and as a result compare the costs and benefits of falling in love and being in love • Sex and commitment are the only differences between friendship and love

  36. Table 6.3: Love Economics Translations

  37. Benefits of Love • Emotional needs • Self esteem, social needs, spiritual needs • Entertainment needs • Social aspects of day-to-day living • Materialistic needs – • Required for survival and happiness, • Food shelter and clothing

  38. Costs of Love • Search cost – ability to attract potential partners • Rejection costs – rejection sensitivity, immunity to rejections and emotional costs of rejections • Maintenance costs – emotional costs and time costs in finding right person

  39. Costs of Love • Breakup risk includes determining the overall benefits with the partner • Breakup costs – emotional costs, financial costs and the search cost to find someone else

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