<p>
<em>"This is a wonderful collection of richly textured, suggestive, and often meticulous essays that interrogate the inter-twined histories of love and European identity. Imaginative readings of diverse archives that go deep into Europe's pasts and extend sideways to her colonies and margins will make this volume indispensable to all contemporary debates on the 'meanings of Europe'. It will also speak to readers far beyond the geographical confines of the continent."</em><b>  ·  </b><strong>Dipesh Chakrabarty, </strong>Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Service Professor of History and South<br />
Asian Studies</p>

In Europe, love has been given a prominent place in European self-representations from the Enlightenment onwards. The category of love, stemming from private and personal spheres, was given a public function and used to distinguish European civilisation from others. Contributors to this volume trace historical links and analyse specific connections between the two discourses on love and Europe over the course of the twentieth century, exploring the distinctions made between the public and private, the political and personal. In doing so, this volume develops an innovative historiography that includes such resources as autobiographies, love letters, and cinematic representations, and takes issue with the exclusivity of Eurocentrism. Its contributors put forth hypotheses about the historical pre-eminence of emotions and consider this history as a basis for a non-Eurocentric understanding of new possible European identities.

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In Europe, love has been given a prominent place in European self-representations from the Enlightenment onwards. The category of love, stemming from private and personal spheres, was given a public function and used to distinguish European civilization from others.
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Acknowledgments

Introduction
Luisa Passerini

PART I: HISTORICIZING LOVE: POINTS DE REPÈRE/ POINTS OF REFERENCE

Chapter 1. Love and Religion: Comparative Comments
Jack Goody

Chapter 2. The Rule of Love: The History of Western Romantic Love in Comparative Perspective
William M. Reddy

Chapter 3. Love of State – Affection for Authority: Politics of Mass Participation in Twentieth Century European Contexts
Alf Lüdtke

Chapter 4. Overseas Europeans: Whiteness and the Impossible Colonial Romance in Interwar Italy
Liliana Ellena

Chapter 5. 'Window to Europe': Social and Cinematic Phantasms of the Post-Soviet Subject
Almira Ousmanova

PART II: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE LOVES

Chapter 6. Love in the Time of Revolution: The Polish Poets of Café Ziemiańska
Marci Shore

Chapter 7. Love, Marriage and Divorce: American and European Reactions to the Abdication of Edward VIII
Alexis Schwarzenbach

Chapter 8. 'Dear Adolf!': Locating Love in Nazi Germany
Alexander C.T. Geppert

Chapter 9. Love, Again: Crisis and the Search for Consolation. The 'Revista de Occidente' and the Creation of a Culture, 1923-1936
Alison Sinclair

Chapter 10. Political Readings of Don Juan and Romantic Love in Spain from the 1920s to the 1940s
Jo Labanyi

PART III: EUROPEAN BORDERS AND CULTURAL DIFFERENCES IN LOVE RELATIONS

Chapter 11. Between Europe and the Atlantic: The Melancholy Paths of Lusotropicalism Margarida
Calafate Ribeiro

Chapter 12. The 'Volkskörper' in Fear: Gender, Race and Sexuality in the Weimar Republic
Sandra Mass

Chapter 13. Anica Savić Rebac, Olga Freidenberg, Edith Stein: Love in the Time of War
Svetlana Slapšak

Chapter 14. Secular Couplings: An Intergenerational Affair with Islam
Ruth Mas

Notes on Contributors
Index

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Liliana Ellena is a historian working at the University of Turin, Italy. She has edited the new Italian edition of Frantz Fanon's I dannati della terra (2000), is the coauthor of Il Quarto Stato. La fortuna di un'immagine tra cultura e politica (2002), and has recently co-edited a special issue of Zapruder (2007) on transnational women’s movements.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781845457365
Publisert
2010-10-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Berghahn Books
Vekt
644 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
RES, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
332

Om bidragsyterne

Luisa Passerini was Professor of Cultural History at the University of Turin, and iscurrently External Professor at the European University Institute, Florence, and Visiting Professor in the Oral History Master Program, Columbia University, New York.  She has published widely on the historical relationships between the discourse on Europe and the discourses on love, gender and generation, and on memory and subjectivity. She was coeditor of Women Migrants from East to West: Gender, Mobility and Belonging in Contemporary Europe (Berghahn Books 2007).